Visual Ways to Present Information



 

Get to know your data or story intimately. Ask yourself 

“What does my data want to look like?”

Based on info and graphics from velocitypartners.co.uk

1. Anatomy: When do you use it? Any time you want to educate about something with many moving constituent parts, which are not widely or easily understood.

 

 Samples: Anatomy of a perfect website

2. Timeline: When to use it? Whenever change over time is your main point.

 

Sample: Call of Duty vs Battlefield

3. Maps: When to use it? Whenever you want to communicate proximity, distance and direction between a number of different items, or data points.

 

 

Sample: The Creative Process

4. Decision Tree: When do you use it? Decision trees are great for guiding people mentally and visually from an indeterminate starting point to any one of many different end-points.

Sample: Do I have to wake up yet?

5. Scale: When do you use it? Anytime you want to prioritize or rank a number of objects against a criterium that your audience will particularly like. Everything in the universe, no matter how unique, is on a sliding scale – we must just ask ourselves what the scale is. 

Sample: The likability of angry birds


Mind Maps:
Here's a great student sample.  After reading and discussing a section of their 11th grade English textbook, students were asked to pull out the big ideas and visually demonstrate what was important.  These students used Popplet:

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