Friday, February 24, 2012

Conference

During my conference, Miss Dieterle asked me why I chose the colors I did for my webtext.  I responded that I was trying to make it professional-looking with the creamish background, and dark gray and orange accents.  I decided to make my sources orange to tie in with the orange bar at the top.  I chose black text Verdana because it's easy to read, and professional.  We discussed how I was doing in the class, and Miss Dieterle helped me with my image text boxes.  I believe she said my draft for my webtext was very good so far.  My peer also liked my webtext.  The one thing she suggested changing was to cite my images at the end of my webtext so that the images fit in the webtext.  Am I allowed to do that?  And if I did that, how would readers know which picture went with which citation?  Also, I was wondering if you gave us feedback for our webtexts yet?  If so, where do I find this feedback?

1 comment:

  1. You can cite your images at the end of the webtext. If you do choose to do this, put them after your source references with a heading similiar to "Images in the order they appear," that way people know the first image they come across is the first entry, and so on.

    I finished giving feedback to the webtexts today. If you go to your Google Docs (you can just click "documents" when you're looking at your gmail), you'll see a document that's titled Kelly's Feedback. I'll be posting all of the feedback I give there, so you'll have to scroll to the end of the document.

    ReplyDelete