EXHIBITION TEXT AND LABELS. ANNOUNCEMENTS Next week, meet at the Peabody and be prepared to talk about your object. We will go to galleries to view two.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Fluently Composing Sophisticated Documents or Writing With Style Melissa Noel Lafayette High School.
Advertisements

Ms. Christoph ESE~Intensive Reading
Elements of Non-Fiction
Exhibition text and object labels. Initial reflection Who are you? Who is your museum?
On-Demand Writing Assessment
English Language Arts The 6+1 Trait Writing Model
6+1 Writing Traits A Guide to Making Your Writing the Best That It Can Possibly Be!
Writing in Biology -. Writing scientific papers Understanding how to do science is a powerful insight Communicating science is critical to success and.
California English Language Development Test Review of the Test Composition.
Welcome to ENG:140 Communications 1 Mike Branam , , or
Introduction to Poetry
What does it take to produce effective writing? The goal is clear, fluent, and effective communication of IDEAS.
Exhibiting History It ’ s More Than a Display Board! British Columbia Heritage Fairs Society adapted with permission from a presentation of Chicago Metro.
Start Let’s a r i o t s ur hing eading.
EXHIBITION PRESENTATIONS PEER PRESENTATIONS 1 ST AND 2 ND APRIL.
English 9 Mrs. Klooz. “I always did well on essay tests. Just put everything you know on there, maybe you’ll hit it. And then you get the paper back from.
Chapter One – Thinking as a Writer
Essay Writing Elements of the Essay.
Week 1 - Introduction to Academic Writing in English Erica Cirillo-McCarthy Assistant Director of Graduate and ADEP Writing.
Test Taking Tips How to help yourself with multiple choice and short answer questions for reading selections A. Caldwell.
AP Prompt #2: Prose Prompt. The FREE RESPONSE prompt (almost) ALWAYS asks… …what it contributes the meaning of the work as a whole …how it illuminates.
“DIALOGUE” REVISIONS RULES FOR ADDING DIALOGUE. WHY DIALOGUE? Dialogue is what keeps the story interesting and moving quickly for the reader. Think about.
Language and Literature HL Paper 1 Analysis and Annotation: How To.
The Conventions of Rhetoric An Amateur’s Guide to Rhetorical Elements of Style.
Accelerated 10 English 1. Read 2. Details 3. Topic – Significant to the Text 4. Return to the details. o Details are combined/interpreted to determine.
Introduction to poster presentation
UNIT 1 ENGLISH DISCOURSE ANALYSIS (an Introduction)
ELA Common Core Shifts. Shift 1 Balancing Informational & Literary Text.
WRITING THE RESEARCH REPORT & CITING RESOURCES BUSN 364 – Week 15 Özge Can.
Learning Objective To know how to write for different purposes.
Language and Literature SL Paper 1 Analysis and Annotation: How To.
Descriptive Essays Writing. What is a descriptive essay? It is a written assignment intended to describe the subject matter to the readers so that they.
OBJECTIVES NCSCS Goal 5 Identify elements of a short story Define elements of a short story Demonstrate mastery of short story elements.
YOU NEED YOUR BOOKS TODAY. PLEASE PLACE YOUR HOMEWORK IN THE APPROPRIATE BIN BEHIND MY DESK.
You may sit in a group of 3 or 4 of your choice. However… So…CHOOSE WISELY… (hint) this is where Ms. Smith sees who can work together well and who can’t.
R EVISING FOR TEXTUAL ANALYSIS F OCUS ON THE KEY ASPECTS OF THE POEM THAT YOU WILL BE ASKED TO REFER TO IN YOUR ANSWER IN THE EXAM / NAB: Central concerns.
PBA Front-End Programming Editorial Style. What does reading on the Web resemble most closely…? – Reading a book – Reading a newspaper – Reading a printed.
Preparing for the TAKS ESSAY. Content / Ideas This is the heart of the paper--what the writer has to say. It should be a topic that is important to.
Narrative Writing Writing a Personal Chronological Narrative.
Lesson #2: Types of Reading and Multiple Choice Questions
© Steven E. Ball, All Rights Reserved Thoughts on Writing in Psychology Not Just an APA Manual Primer (in fact, not that at all!) Thanks to Dick Fulkerson,
Narration Script Writing Outline n Definition n Steps in preparing a script n Basic parts of a script n Finishing your script Narration Script Writing.
Bellwork Nov. 2, 2015 Copy and answer. Standard/I can Standards: ELAGSE7RI1: Cite textual evidence; make inferences. ELAGSE7RI2: Determine the central.
A More Detailed Look at the Traits of Writing +1.
+. + Close Reading & Annotation Or: Here’s what you’re going to do with the text so you can answer the questions later.
What are The Traits of Writing? A trait can be defined as a characteristic needed for a successful performance. Just as there are traits for good.
Fix it to make it clearer “As the cacophony of sounds from the child’s crying wafted into my ears, I felt that my depiction of a clown was an injudicious.
Copyright © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
 Looking at preparing for The Written Response Part A  Write mock Reading Comprehension  Looking at preparing for the Reading Comprehension  Preparation.
Arrwa Mogalli District Instructional Coach Howe Montessori February 3rd, 2016 Dearborn Public School’s Writing Workshop.
IdeasIdeasIdeasIdeas OrganizationOrganizationOrganizationOrganization VoiceVoiceVoiceVoice WorChoiceWorChoiceWorChoiceWorChoice Sentence FluencySentence.
SOAPSTone Speaker Occasion Audience Purpose Subject Tone Mr. Ott – Park East
ANIMAL FARM BY: GEORGE ORWELL. GEORGE ORWELL
7 Good Writing Traits: Otherwise known as the writing traits How writing is assessed.
The keys to successful writing.  Ideas  Organization  Word Choice  Voice  Sentence Fluency  Conventions.
Exhibit Labels. Why are labels important? Labels are Informative: Labels should provide visitors with the context necessary to understand an object. Labels.
Posters How to make them. How to present them..
Unit Four: Narrative Vocabulary Literary Devices and Story Elements.
T HE W RITING P ROCESS :D RAFTING, R EVISING, AND E DITING Paola Álvarez Ezqueda English 6th semester.
Research Methods, 9th Edition Theresa L. White and Donald H. McBurney Chapter 4 Writing in Psychology.
Animal Farm Introduction.
Four Square Writing activity
Advanced English 6 November 1-2, 2017
כתיבה מדעית והצגת מצגת הרצאה במסגרת קורס פרוייקט לשנה ג בגיאופיסיקה
Synthesis Essay English 11.
Oral Presentation - Accredited
College APP Essay Personal Statement.
Advanced English 6 November 10, 14
In this PowerPoint… Quick Write 2 Origins Matrix TVFS Quiz 1
Presentation transcript:

EXHIBITION TEXT AND LABELS

ANNOUNCEMENTS Next week, meet at the Peabody and be prepared to talk about your object. We will go to galleries to view two objects. Please submit papers as word docs. I make notes in track changes and send the file back to you.

“Higher Order Concerns”: Big Picture Topic Audience Thesis Statement & Purpose Organization Supporting data “Lower Order Concerns”: Mechanics spelling grammar punctuation sentence structure word choice syntax (word order) Higher & Lower Order Concerns necessary for success!

WHAT STORY ARE YOU TELLING? The Big Idea: theme or story that sets the tone and limits the content Topics (incomplete thoughts) are not ideas Different stories Positivist, curator-driven story Multiple meanings To get at the “big story” consider meaningfulness of object for your audience Different types of labels: interpretive, non-interpretive, categories of labels

LABEL STYLES Interpretive vs. descriptive Active vs. passive engagement New Museum Age: dispersed authority Accountability Poetics and politics

DIFFERENT KINDS OF LABELS

WRITING LABEL TEXT Topic Theme Message (‘When people have read this they will know…’)

THINGS TO KEEP IN MIND Ferguson, et al (1995) identify a number of factors that shape texts: what is being discussed: the subject matter who is taking part: the audience the way the communication is taking place: the nature of language that translates to the style of the text the structures and form of language used: the choice of words and the interactions between the authors of the texts and the end user They also describe other factors specific to museums: museum visits are free form: visitors choose what they attend to museum texts complement other forms of interpretation, acting as labels for interactive, signposts and orientation devices and instructions museums have visitors: all kinds of people with a wide variety of learning styles and interests are motivated to visit museums for a range of reasons Ferguson, L., MacLulich, C. & Ravelli, L. (1995). Meanings and messages: language guidelines for museum exhibitions. Sydney: Australian Museum

WRITING TEXT AND LABELS THAT WORK Serrell (1996, p.84-91) identified a number of steps in writing visitor friendly labels: start with information directly related to what visitors can see, feel, do, smell, or experience from where they are standing vary the length of the sentences use short paragraphs and small chunks, not large blocks of information metaphors are better for other forms of narrative, not labels alliteration is an easy device to overuse exclamation marks in labels shout at readers and force emphasis on them humor should be used sparingly use quotations when they advance the narrative and are necessary expect visitors to want to read use informative paragraph titles and subtitles have a snappy ending newspaper journalism is not a good model as articles are written with the assumption that readers will not read everything stay flexible within the label system - labels that all look the same become boring to read interrelate labels and their settings include visitors in the conversation: encourage their participation

V & A GUIDE Write for your audience Stick to the text hierarchy and word count Organize your information Engage with the object Admit uncertainty Bring in the human element Sketch in the background Write as you would speak Construct your text with care

PACKING AND UNPACKING Containing the length of labels is like packing for a trip…consider packing in three separate piles: The things we would like to take The things we think we need The things we absolutely cannot get along without And then take only the third group

PART OF THIS IS EDITING Never use a metaphor, simile or other figure of speech which you are used to seeing in print Never use a long word where a short word will do If it is possible to cut a word, always cut it out Never use the passive when you can use the active Never use a foreign phrase, a scientific word or a jargon word if you can think of an everyday equivalent Break any of these rules sooner than say anything outright barbarous George Orwell, Politics and the English Language, 1946

THE LABEL AS SHORT STORY Active Subject Context Significance/message Reproduced photograph, man wearing headdress ( ) 1898, Marquesas Islands William McM. Woodworth produced this studio photograph as a way for Western audiences to experience an "exotic" culture. This man’s tattoos fascinated Western audiences but were also a way to convey adulthood and served as visual armor to ward off malevolent spirits and human enemies in his Polynesian culture.

THINKING ABOUT INTERPRETATIONS, LABELS, AND ARCHIVES Museum AAM curators committee On display Social tagging Archives and labels: etails.aspx?objectId= &partId=1&searchText=London&fromDate=1990&fromADBC=a d&toDate=2012&toADBC=ad&productionInfo=on&orig=/research/search_the_collection_d atabase.aspx&images=on&numpages=10&currentPage=6?bioId= etails.aspx?objectId= &partId=1&searchText=London&fromDate=1990&fromADBC=a d&toDate=2012&toADBC=ad&productionInfo=on&orig=/research/search_the_collection_d atabase.aspx&images=on&numpages=10&currentPage=6?bioId= Back to the British Museum: nland/kayak_clothing_from_greenland.aspx nland/kayak_clothing_from_greenland.aspx