Use Exhibit 16-5 in your textbook and the sample infographic to design an infographic of your team’s project or an infographic of a research study that you found to be of personal interest to you as you explored literature to support your study. Visually communicate the details of the study as clearly and creatively as you can.
There are several free or free-trial online infographic software options available to build infographics (several are mentioned in the text), that you may use. Include the following in your infographic:
Justify the main message of your infographic (purpose of the research)
Data insights or visualizations
Any graph technique you choose should be simple (bar, columnar, pies), not one used by researchers to interpret data (e.g., box plots, etc.)
Tips on Designing an Infographic
An information graphic (infographic) is a visual representation of a data set or instructive material. Infographics take a large amount of information in text (or numerical form) and then condense it into a combination of images and text highlights. This modern data transformation technique allows viewers to quickly grasp essential insights about a specific subject. You may want to consider reviewing this ten-minute video (link below) to see what elements go into creating an effective infographic.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nLxQAa5Sras
Get as creative as possible, and design a well-organized, easy to understand infographic. You can visit Piktochart, Canva, Venngage, and Visme online for infographic examples, tips on how to create them, and templates.
View the https://docs.google.com/document/d/1L5YLLnTD8Hv2HqfyvQFRTSCVporVYUkTdfhKqVOEDM4/edit?usp=sharing