The structure for writing stories, written out.
The main focus of the photo
What is a subject?
Acronym used to express the elements of design.
What is P(uppy)BARCS?
The goal of the Yearbook.
What is to tell an exciting, unique story about this year in the Vanguard Junior High?
What is paraphrasing?
The sentence after the lead that summarizes the story.
What is a nut graph?
The three types of photos.
What are emotion, reaction, and action shots?
A line drawn between the subject of the dominant photo and the headline.
What is an eyeline?
This type of font doesn't have fancy swirls on the letters.
An Elvis song, any Elvis song.
What is (varies).
The most interesting information found at the beginning of a story.
Lead.
The acronym used to determine whether a photo tells a story.
What is DEER CARS?
Connection between the headline and the dominant photo.
Verbal-visual connection.
Refers to all text on a spread except the headline and subheading.
Body copy.
Mr. Crosby's motto, which may or may not hang on the wall in this classroom.
What is "challenge is just another word for opportunity?"
The most important ingredient in any story
What is unity?
At least two compositional techniques.
What are framing, leading lines, repetition, focusing on the thing done, etc.
What are proximity, balance, alignment, repetition, contrast, or space?
The purpose of a theme.
What is to unify the Yearbook and excite readers?
The sweet Yearbook theme that didn't make the cut.
What is cereal?
Verb construction used for all body copy
Active voice.
Four storytelling techniques.
What are detail, emotion, energy, reaction, character, action, relationships, and setting?
Something isolated from the rest of the spread that highlights a specific student, teacher, or event.
What is a quick read/content module?
A page spotlighting the hard work of the Yearbook staff.
Two of the seven norms of collaboration.
What are pausing, paraphrasing, providing data, putting ideas on the table, posing questions, and presuming positive intentions?