Imagine that you are the Director of Environmental Safety for a major city in the United States. As the director, you are asked to write a press release educating the public on chemical and mechanical weathering of national monuments, such as the limestone buildings in Washington, DC, or important tombs made of limestone throughout the country.Create an educational brochure that includes the following information:Definitions of both mechanical and chemical weatheringDescriptions of frost wedging, frost heaving, salt-crystal growth, and exfoliationDescriptions of hydrolysis, oxidation and carbonationExplanation of the relationship between chemical and mechanical weatheringExplanation of how human activity affects chemical and mechanical weatheringFormat your references consistent with APA guidelines.Use in text references and proper APA format with images including figure number, legend, citation and referral to the images in the text portion of your brochure. This is a brochure. Please use the template provided or another brochure template. Points will be deducted for a paper or a power point presentation
geo180_tri_fold_pamphlet_guide.doc
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phlet.
Trifold Pamphlet
Pamphlets often have a banner at the top of the first
page, like this one, to help create a brand or identity.
Read Me First!
The following will help you make your
pamphlet work!
All the text in this trifold pamphlet is in one
continuous flow, starting here. You can use either
Microsoft® Word or Microsoft® Publisher to create
your brochure. Be considerate of white space,
formatting or organizing, and the look of your
brochure.
This is a template for a trifold pamphlet with the
The front
back page folded outward
so the paper forms a zigzag
(see Figure 1). To read this
pamphlet, the reader holds
page 1 and pulls it
open so
columns 1, 2,
and 3 are all
visible at once, then
turns the paper over to read
Figure 1. A trifold pamphlet.
columns 4, 5, and 6 (Figure 1 is looking at the back
side of the pamphlet.)
If you printed this on double-sided paper and
folded it into thirds, you would see why this is the
first page and how the text flows from page to page.
This inserted box is a kind of graphic called a
textbox. It is often used to hold a table of contents
or preview.
Instructions ……………………………………………….. 1
More stuff …………………………………………………. 3
Still more stuff……………………………………………. 5
—1—
How It All Works
Using Text Styles
This document has several different Microsoft®
Word text styles that you may find useful. See
Microsoft® Word manuals and help guides for more
information about styles. The names of these styles
start with the word “Pamphlet – ” to distinguish
them from other styles in the Styles list. The body
text you are reading right now is in the “Body text”
style, which uses the Garamond typeface. The
headlines and other styles use various forms of the
Franklin Gothic typeface. These include styles for
“Headline,” “Sub-headline,” “Pull quote” and
“Pull quote attribution,” “Image caption,” and
“Page footer.” If you modify the definition of a
style (the typeface, point size, spacing, and so forth),
it changes the text wherever that style is being
used—which is a good way to change the look of
your pamphlet—but could end up moving things
around and making your text longer or shorter.
Text Wrapping
Text wrapping determines how close the text of
the article (this text) comes to an image. There are a
few kinds of text-wrapping:
one that can make the text
wrap closely (like in Figures
1 & 4); another can make
text surround the box that
contains the image (like the
banner at the beginning of
page 1, the table of contents
text box at the bottom
Figure 2. Picture
of page 1, the pull quote,
figures 2, and the text box at the end of page 6). You
can also set images between columns or pages like
the pull quote below, or so that text flows on one
side of an image like in Figure 2 to the right.
See Microsoft® Word manuals and help guides
for more information about text wrapping.
Now It Is Up to You…
Using Images
To insert your text, first click your mouse on this
text,
press Ctrl + A (for “Select All”), then paste
Sample images have been inserted into this
your
text in its place. This will replace all the
template, which you will need to alter or change as
headlines and body text in all the pages
needed for your content. Generally, you
with your content. (This action will not
will want to have images in only one
change any text in images, such as in the
page (column), if that page is typically
Use a pull quote
text boxes or the captions.) The text will
viewed by itself (like page 1 and page 4).
from
the
text
as
automatically flow to all other panels,
If more than one page is typically
depending on the amount of text you
though it were a
viewed at the same time as a spread (like
have pasted. You will need to apply the
the page-spreads 2 & 3 and 5 & 6), then
graphic, to visually
correct styles (Body text and headlines)
you can have graphics that straddle both
before it begins to look right.
break
up
the
text
pages (columns), like the pull quote to
You will then need to do the same
the right. You can move images by
and highlight an
with images: substitute yours for the
clicking on them, then clicking again on
important thought.
made-up ones included. Most of the
their border to select them, and then
—Who Said It
images are contained inside Microsoft®
dragging them by that border. When
Word canvases (all but the table of
selected, you can also move images with
contents and the pull quote), which have longer
the arrow keys, and you can copy and paste them.
handles. The figure canvases contain both an image
Handles on the borders also allow you to resize
and a caption. You can click on the image inside the
images, and right-clicking the border will make other
canvas (it will have its own set of handles) and then
options available to you.
select Insert > Picture and navigate to your image
to copy your image to its place. You may need to
adjust its size after you have copied it, or the size of
the canvas in which it is contained.
—2—
—3—
Because all the pages are one continuous flow, a
change in an earlier page can change the spacing of a
later page. If your text has overflowed to a third
page, you will need to remove some text or change
the size or number of your images.
After all your content has been added, you will
need to rearrange things to fit—edit text, move
images around, change image sizes, and so forth.
Important note. Images in Microsoft® Word tend
to move around while you are working with text, so
work on fitting the text first and then alter and move
the images afterward. You may need to repeat this
sequence a few times to get everything to fit the way
you want it.
Remember to print these instructions before
you start changing things so you can refer to
them later.
Tips on Pamphlet
•
Be considerate of white space
throughout your pamphlet.
•
Use images: maps, pictures, and
graphics.
•
Consider a good font size and style.
You can adjust everything to create
the most aesthetically pleasing
design.
•
Consider how someone would open
and read your pamphlet.
•
Make sure to submit both a front
and back of your pamphlet.
•
Be creative with this project and use
this as instructions or an example.
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Figure 4. This is an Image that spans two pages because they are viewed
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(To see how wrapping on this image was done, see “Edit Wrap Points”)
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References, or
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Goodbye!
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The End
Subheadline
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—4—
—5—
Often, the end of a
pamphlet will have a
logo which identifies
who is responsible, or
a box with information
about whom the
reader may contact if
they have questions—
or both!
—6—
…
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