What is an Infographic?
- What is an Infographic? – slide show
- What is an Infographic?
- What is an Infographic? Quantitative date vs qualitative data.
- What the heck are inforgraphics? And why you should use them! Blog
Examples of Infographics:
- Make your own: 100 People: A World Portrait
- How the World Spends Time Online
- How State Laws Keep Millions of People from Voting
- Newsmap
- Is the Internet Hurting Our Environment?
- Real Life Infographics
- (Almost) everything you need to know about infographics (Kathy Schrock)
- Demographic Changes in Canadian Agriculture
- Thematic Maps from the Census of Agriculture
Resources:
Data Sources:
How To Make Infographics
- Create beautiful Infographics in Excel – Create and Learn
- Excel Tutorial: Building an infographic using a picture fill
- Fast and Easy Infographics with Word or Powerpoint (using Smart Art)
- How to Create Infographic Elements in PowerPoint
- Create Infographic Icons in PowerPoint using Simple Shapes
- How to Create Spheres in PowerPoint
- How to Create Icons in PowerPoint
Infographic Requirements:
Requirements for the infographic:
- Title that describes what your infographic is about (ex. If I wanted an IPad, what would I need to do?)
- Reveals differences.
- An infographic should show one of the following:
- How something works (ex. 3-D movies),
- The evolution of something (ex. a camera from its origins to today),
- A statistical representation of an idea (ex. how much time is spend using technology for the average person during a day).
- Relevant (will actually teach someone something that is meaningful)
- School appropriate.
- Statistical. Includes numbers, percentages, etc.
- Includes words to promote an understanding of your topic (usually, for every photo or image you have – you should have a concise statement to help your audience understand it)
- ORIGINAL. DO NOT plagiarize. It would be easy for you to find an infographic online and copy everything it says – do not do this! I will be checking this and I will find out. Plagiarism is a serious academic offence!
- References (sources of the data) are cited right on the infographic.