I’m starting to feel a little better about the
direction of my final project. I had
thought I narrowed down my topic to creating a tutorial for teachers on how to
create a STEM unit. However, Martha made
a good point in her feedback when she stated, “Creating a standardized tutorial on it seems to go against
the STEM model, not to mention it would require a great deal of in-depth
creation to properly showcase it.” That was a good point. Then Dr. Orey got me thinking when he said in
class to choose something we’re passionate about, and it doesn’t necessarily
have to be something we teach.
So I
decided to do my final project on Lesser-Known
Events in History. I’m kind of a
history buff and like learning more in-depth the story behind the story when it
comes to historical events. I want to
stay away from events with conspiracy theories like the assassination of JFK
and the moon landing and focus more on facts.
A few ideas I have include:
- Abraham Linclon and John Wilkes Booth are in the same photo at Lincoln’s Second Inauguration.
- Thieves tried to steal Lincoln’s body on election night in 1876 and hold it for ransom. What happened to Lincoln’s body after that is pretty fascinating.
- George Washington technically isn’t the first U.S. President, he’s actually the 9th.
I’d like to make it interactive, sort of like the
Crime Scene Investigation example. The
next step for me is to get acquainted with Articulate Storyline over the next
few days to start to get an idea for how my project will be laid out.
There are definitely
some aspects from Krause that I can use in my final project. I really found the section on Composition interesting,
but there were so many rules and principles to follow that I found myself
overthinking some of the slides I use in my classroom. Three major rules of Composition that stood
out to me were:
- Principles of Unequal Spacing
- “Dead-center” spacing
- Alignments principles on pages 80-81 that talked about the flush-left, flush-right, justified, and center.
Although there were a
lot of rules and principles to follow in the Composition section, the examples
made it easy to follow. The beginning of
the Components section was a bit more ambiguous to me, such as the idea of visual
texture. It took some re-reading by me
to understand some of these principles. Some
of the principles from Components that I’d like to incorporate in my final project
came from the “Supporting Elements” sections:
- Effective use of backdrops (nice examples on pages 182-183)
- Linework: Should only be used when needed (great examples on pages 174-175).
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