Monday, December 13, 2010

Final Graphic Rationale


FINAL GRAPHIC
































Final Graphic Rationale

Throughout the year we learned about various graphical models as well as theorists. These ideas have helped us achieve successful grades in our assignments. For our final project we decided to create a visualization on what we have learned this semester in order to explain it to someone. We volleyed ideas such as crosswords, game boards, and others but after much thought we did not find them to be successful. Using what we have learned about color, shape, orientation, and types of visualization we have created a puzzle that when pieced together, spells out visual comm. We used the dual-coding theory, which enabled us to represent the main concepts of the course. The first idea we had was to use the words “visual comm” in the middle of our graphic with main concepts, theorist, and points inside of them. However, we felt that this was just satisfactory and decided to sleep on the idea. The morning of our morning second meeting, Jordan revealed a second portion of our project that would make it excel. Our “aha!” moment came when we decided to make our main “visual comm” graphic into a puzzle and then break up our presentation piece by piece. We found this to be more effective as it brought a bigger message to our project. When trying to add the words visual comm to the puzzle, the cognitive load became too heavy. The visual comm letters were too confusing so we decided against the idea. At first we thought that using four colors would make the graphic clear and concise but after looking at the final graphic we decided it was too boring and lacked creativity. When all the puzzle pieces fit together, the key concepts and theories are come together to create the class “visual comm.” Each puzzle piece represents an assignment we did individually as a class. As the class came to a close we came together and used all our knowledge to create this final graphic.


Personal Input:

The assignment was extremely vague and it intimidating as I did not know how to fit a years worth of material into one graphic. I laid in bed at night thinking about the different things we could do as a group but I remained stumped. However, when I was sitting in class one day, an idea came to me that would be a great concept for my graphic. I wanted to make a puzzle that when all the concepts fit together it would say "Visual Comm." However, my partners Jenna and Jordan decided to go with just the concepts without the wording. Jenna and Jordan helped an amazing amount and I could not ask for better partners. We all worked very well together and since we all gave our best efforts, the graphic turned out to be a success! We went through some speed bumps like a dog peeing on our poster board but we were all able to pull our own weight and get the project done.


(I can only put 3 iterations up but we did 5)

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Multivariate Graphic















RATIONALE:

In starting this graphic I honestly became flustered at the word multivariate and did not even want to continue. However, I looked through my notes and the graphic syllabus and I was able to get a better understanding on where I was going to head. I knew I wanted to add on to my swimming results graph because I knew there was so much more data I could add. I perused through the RWU Hawks website and found two different swimming seasons that I could add. I found all the point and added two more lines to my line graph. The lines were very similar and I thought that it may be a bit confusing. I thought this may be an increase in the cognitive load but, I suddenly realized that the lines tell a story. During this assignment I forgot that there must be some sort of message that come out of your graph but in the process I found it! The Roger Williams Swim Team started in 2006 and is therefore very young. In posting the points earned at every swim meet. I was able to show how in each year that we swam, the team got better. This really shows the extreme growth in the program and the graph does a pretty good job and depicting that. I used colors and labels which is also known as dual coding. This reduced the cognitive load for the viewers which then made a successful graphic

Multivariate Graphic














RATIONALE:
In starting this graphic I honestly became flustered at the word multivariate and did not even want to continue. However, I looked through my notes and the graphic syllabus and I was able to get a better understanding on where I was going to head.