a story related to but kept separate from another on the same subject

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SIDEBARS/INFOGRAPHICS

A story related to but kept separate from another on the same subject

Infographic

Design element that illustrates a story, such as a chart, map, diagram, quotation or sidebar; short for informational graphic.

There are many types of infographics. The main thing is to remember that they provide information about the topic of your story.

Sidebar

Supplement to the main story on spread

Provides extra detail or “color” Uses whatever approach is most likely

to grab the reader’s attention

Quote Collection

Statements on the story’s topic by students and others

Fast facts

The five W’s and the H of a story precisely presented

Bio brief

A short profile of a person or group mentioned in the story

Glossary

A list of unfamiliar terms in the story, with definitions

Time line

A chronological list of key dates and events in a story

Step-by-step guide

A succinct summary of a process explained in the story

Quiz

A series of questions about issues related to the story’s content

Resource references

A list of places where readers can get more information

Examples

This sidebar to an article about advertising trends compares the percentage of ads skipped purposely to the percentage of ads skipped with a DVR (like TIVO).

Examples

This sidebar to an article about advertising trends compares the primetime ratings and ad revenue over the past 30 years.

Examples

This sidebar to an article about Hybrid technology shows the inner workings of a Hybrid vehicle.

Examples

This sidebar shows what the author featured in the article has on her own bookshelf.

Examples

This sidebar gives basic biographical information about the subject of the article.

Examples

This sidebar to an article about throwing a party offers tips for enjoying it yourself.

Examples

This sidebar to an article about a successful personal trainer lists some of his unexpected advice about working out.

Examples

This sidebar to an article about animals in need gives information about how readers can help.

Examples

These Hybrid sales charts are sidebars to an article about Hybrid technology.

Examples

This sidebar to an article about advertising trends tracks types of media used over the past 15 years.

Examples

This sidebar to an article about the benefits of listening to music offers suggestions for new music based on old tastes.

Examples

This sidebar to an article about “the New Southern Home” lists and describes the benefits of home automation.

Examples

This sidebar to a current events article offers interesting number factoids.

Examples

This sidebar to an article about advertising trends compares old and new ideas about common things.

Examples

This sidebar to an article about a historical highway in Texas gives a map and advice on things to do while traveling this route.

Examples

This sidebar to a Christmas gift wrapping article gives simple steps for creating a pom-pom bow.

Examples

This sidebar to an article about texting gives some basic advice for a person who has never texted.

Note: this magazine is geared toward the 40+ set; you would not see a texting primer in a teen magazine

Examples

This sidebar to an article about Christmas shopping for kids is a timeline of popular children’s gifts over the past 100 years.

Glasgow’s Infographic Checklist Research carefully.

You’ve got to be an expert on the subject. Focus tightly.

Pinpoint precisely what you need to explain before you begin.

Design logically. Let your central image give structure to the

design. Label clearly.

Use factoids in the form of words with arrows, lines or boxes to identify every detail.

Some things to remember

A sidebar is not an advertisement. A sidebar offers information that

goes along with the main article on the page.

The sidebar should appeal to the magazine’s audience.

The sidebar should present information in the easiest to understand format.

Your sidebar

You will be creating a sidebar to go in your magazine.

Copy the “Sidebar/Infographic Proposal” questions onto your Google page, and answer them.

What you will do in class: If it is your assigned time, work on

your layout using an InDesign computer.

If you are not working on an InDesign computer, complete your “sidebar proposal,” research and create your sidebar or work on some other aspect of your magazine.

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