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2 slides on what is Roe Vs. Wade A slide on what effects does it had on American history today A slide of picture of the case it self
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Roe Vs. Wade is a court case that is wrap around a lady named Norma L. Movery found out that she was pregnant and she assert falsely that she was raped because she then could get an legal abortion How ever the plan failed because there was no documenting on the rap it self. She then was referred to attorneys Linda Coffey and Sarah Weddington The case for the defendant token over by Henry Wade who was on the side of the state of Texas the rape was not mentioned any where in the courts documents and was fever consider Roe V. Wade and Wade dose not mention the word rape
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The court ruled in favor but declined to grant an injunction against enforcement of the law barring abortion. Therefore the chief justice Warren Berger propose the case this took place October 11,1972 The co
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7. Summarize 8. End memorably
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Be consistent: consistent background, consistent font, etc. Use text effectively Generally, follow a 6x6 rule: not more than six words across or six bullets down Text should be concise thoughts not paragraphs
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Use text effectively (continued Serif fonts (fonts with “tails” like Times New Roman are easier to read versus fonts without serifs such as Arial) Limit using ALL CAPITAL letters Choose a simple font that is easy to read unless the style of font adds meaning to the text Proofread
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Use text effectively (continued) Titles and headlines should fit on one line Font color needs to be a strong contrast to background color
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Mathematical center versus visual center Mathematical Center Visual Center
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Rule of Thirds These four intersections are are good focus points All nine squares should have something in them (none should be solid color) Something should touch every edge
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White space is needed to provide contrast to catch the reader’s eye Don’t clutter your page with too much text
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Transitions should flow Use appropriate transitions Transitions can add meaning to a presentation
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Humans process visuals 66,000 times faster than text
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Real photographs add more meaning than clip art Graphics should be relevant to written content and add to the presentation Charts are easier to read than a table of numbers Utilize quality graphics Images can contain emotion and bring meaning to words
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What is cropping? Selecting the part of the image you want while removing the rest. Why crop pictures? Cropping can bring the viewers focus to the subject and make unexciting photos appear more dynamic.
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Good cropping uses sufficient space at the top, bottom and sides of photo. Consider where you are going to use the image. Does it need to fit into a vertical, horizontal or square space? When cropping people it is best to crop at a person’s knee, waist, elbows or shoulders, depending on how much of the person you want to show.
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Before After
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Sound should enhance presentation (think about commercial jingles) Appropriate to written content
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Color should draw the viewer’s attention to the desired information Learn & teach color theory
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RepetitionRepetition Balance RepetitionRepetition CURVE One a M nip r P tne i H rtt e A ayi t S s t y I t i S o n
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Remember Opposites Something bigSomething small Something shortSomething tall Something darkSomething light Helps to make your picture all right
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Stand 10 feet away from your computer monitor. Can you read it? If not, increase your font size 1/3, 2/3: Keep the front 1/3 of the room dark and the back 2/3 lighted Generally you need 2 inches of screen size for each person in the audience
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Bermark, Dr. Lynell, “Strategies for Sucessful Presentations,” Thornburg Center for Professional Development, Jukes, Ian, “Creating Knock-Your-Socks-Off Presentations: How to Deliver your Message with Power and Pizzazz,” The InfoSavvy Group
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