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Instructional Graphics

See also Image Table page.


Joe Old
The images below are essentially very simple, and were created in Paint using the features for drawing lines, boxes, and circles and adding color as it was seen to be needed. These can work on web pages or can be incorporated into Microsoft Word documents for handouts. The chief difference in these images and those in the "Image Table" is that these are charts and graphs. Both were converted from "Bitmap" format to JPEG or GIF before uploading.

This was created to illustrate the notion of the "hermeneutic circle":

You can't understand the whole without understanding the parts. You can't understand the parts without understanding the whole.

 

Why reread ANY text?

You get MORE out of it the second and third time you read it...

 

This graphic was developed to illustrate an analysis of Ernest Hemingway's short story. In the web page into which it was inserted, various parts of the graphic were designated as "hotspots," which means that you could click on them to take you relevant text. But that's a more advanced course! (To see how the original worked in the context of the web page it was created for, click here. The numbered boxes contain hotspots that connect to subsections within the page. At the end of each, there is a return button that brings the reader back to this graphic.)