1) The document discusses improvements made to magazine covers and contents pages based on learning codes and conventions.
2) Key improvements to the magazine cover include using the correct font and positioning for the masthead, properly framing coverlines around the main image, including features like the barcode and price at the correct size, and improving the splash page size and positioning.
3) Improvements to the contents page include adding the issue number and date in the proper place, organizing images in a column structure, using smaller text sizes and article headings, separating page numbers by color, and providing a more effective color scheme and organization of categories.
The band MONSOON has been together for an unknown length of time. The members met in an unspecified way and some may have previous musical experience outside the band. When they started, their aspirations were to perform live music for crowds. Performing live gives the feeling of exciting audiences. The band writes their own music and performs live regularly. Their future plans involve continuing to make music and achieve success in the music industry. They advise beginners to form bonds and give advice on managing nerves when performing.
Jake Eccles is a 16-year-old male student who enjoys football, rugby, the gym, music festivals, gigs, and computer games. He is very active and outgoing, attending as many indie rock concerts as possible to see his favorite bands like The Courteeners. He likes to keep up with the indie rock scene through social media and music apps.
Ellie Capper is a 17-year-old female apprentice who enjoys the gym, fitness classes, festivals, gigs, and spending time with friends. She is drawn to the cool, unique image of indie rock and finds meaning in the songs. As a busy person, she keeps up with indie rock activities through social media and music
The media product represents the indie rock social group. It depicts members of this group as average looking white males and females. While most images feature males, one image includes a female to avoid completely alienating women. The styles portrayed match the intended indie rock image. Articles use formal language, implying the group is well-educated. Long-form content suggests members enjoy reading. Featured artists represent the open-mindedness of the audience to different indie rock styles.
Throughout constructing a magazine front cover in Photoshop and content pages in Quark, the author learned new skills and techniques to create a more realistic and appealing product. They discovered how to edit text for unique styles, use shapes effectively for different elements, and crop and insert images neatly. When constructing the pages, the author applied tools wisely to follow conventions and used effects to make text stand out, producing an end result that was well-structured and would entice audiences.
This document appears to be a questionnaire for a music magazine. It collects demographic information like age, gender, and ethnicity. It also asks questions about music preferences like favorite artists and genres. Additional questions gauge reading habits and purchasing behaviors related to music magazines, such as frequency of buying magazines and albums. Respondents are also asked about pricing expectations and preferred content and extras in music magazines.
The document summarizes the results of a questionnaire about music magazine preferences. Key findings include that most respondents were ages 15-20 and Caucasian, and popular bands mentioned were The 1975, The Courteeners, Arctic Monkeys, and Catfish & the Bottlemen. Respondents associated the indie rock genre with the word "alternative" and colors like white, black, red, and brown. They enjoyed reading about festivals/gigs and band interviews and preferred magazines that cost £2-£2.50 and had 51-70 pages with both informal and formal writing styles.
The document discusses design elements commonly found in music magazines, including:
- Using 2-3 contrasting colors for the color scheme and black and white for text to make content easy to read.
- Including images related to articles to make pages less boring and more attractive while creating the illusion of less text.
- Larger font sizes for article headings to make band/artist names more noticeable than other text.
- Small page numbers in contrasting colors to stand out but identify the page information is on.
- The largest font for the "contents" title to easily identify what page it is.
The document discusses the key design elements of a magazine cover, including the masthead, main image, coverlines, barcode, price/date/issue number, splash, positioning statement, skyline, fonts, and color scheme. The masthead contains the magazine title in a large, unique font at the top of the cover. The main image, usually featuring a well-known person, is the largest and aims to draw attention. Coverlines in contrasting colors around the image tease the content within. Smaller design elements like the barcode and pricing information do not distract from the focal points. Colorful graphics and statements are used to incentivize purchasing the magazine.
The magazine represents several social groups, including gender by including both male and female images, age by focusing on people ages 16-17, and fashion/style through the trendy indie rock outfits featured. The informal writing style also aims to attract readers by providing a relaxed tone. Overall, the magazine tries to appeal to different groups through inclusive representation and relatable content.
This document profiles three potential members of the target audience for a media product:
- Georgia Ozanne, a 17-year-old who loves going to concerts and uses Spotify to keep up with the latest music trends. Her favorite band is Catfish and the Bottlemen.
- Annabel Furby, a 17-year-old college student who enjoys baking, reading, and listening to music. She goes to 5-6 concerts per year and enjoys the live music experience. Her favorite song is "7" by Catfish and the Bottlemen.
- Jack Ratcliffe, a 17-year-old who attends college and plays in the band. He has diverse music tastes and uses Spotify to
The document summarizes the strengths, weaknesses, and tools used in creating a double-page skills development spread. The layout and color scheme were strengths that grabbed attention. A weakness was the lack of inserts to break up text. Importing text and images was easy, but saving the double pages caused issues. The main tool used was the text tool to control font sizes, colors, and styles within the chosen color scheme.
The student created a cover for a music magazine using Photoshop. They succeeded in following conventions like using a masthead font related to the genre and including bands their target audience would like. Their design improved from their initial sketch. They learned to use Photoshop with minimal teacher help to create a relatively professional product. Their weakness was time management, as they struggled to finish in the allotted time. Moving layers and making the masthead disappear behind the cover star were the most difficult elements. Since their preliminary task, the student has become more confident using Photoshop through repetition. They better understand conventions and can structure covers to suit audiences.
The survey results showed that the magazine appealed to its target audience of 16-25 year old females. 81% of respondents correctly identified the genre, and most felt the cover image, colors, and fonts were appealing. The cover star was seen as tying in with the magazine's indie style. Layout, articles, colors and fonts on interior pages were also well-liked. The article provided information, and colors and images were engaging. Consistent color schemes linked pages. Most felt the price was fair. The front cover was seen as the most professionally designed part of the magazine.
1) The respondent conducted a survey to get feedback on their pop punk music magazine called "Unplugged". Most respondents were between ages 16-25 and female, fitting the target audience.
2) When asked if the magazine was worth £2.99, 18 out of 20 respondents said yes.
3) All 20 respondents said competitions in the magazine would persuade them to purchase it.
4) Across various questions, images were most appealing part of the cover, contents page, and article spreads - showing the visual design was effective.
5) Most respondents said the magazine conveyed the pop punk genre as intended. All said they would be interested in reading it and that it fits the 16-25
An audience feedback survey was conducted for a music magazine. The majority of respondents were 16-25 year old males who found the magazine appealing. Most found the bands on the front cover and articles appealing. The majority said the genre was acoustic and the £3.99 price was reasonable. Most said all pages looked professional and they would consider buying it in a supermarket.
I learned several new techniques in Photoshop, including how to manually focus a camera and import fonts. I also gained experience using Quark to create double page spreads. Through completing this magazine project myself rather than as part of a team, I took on many roles and learned the significant work involved in production. Some specific skills I learned were how to manipulate image size in Photoshop, import pictures and resize them, create text boxes, insert drop caps and line breaks. For my blog evaluating this project, I used PowerPoint, Prezi and videos to make it visually interesting and go into depth on topics.
This document contains a survey with questions about demographics, opinions on magazine design elements, genre, price, and likelihood of purchase. Respondents are asked their age, gender, and if the magazine appeals to them. They are then asked what design aspects on the front cover, contents page, and double page spread appeal to them. Additional questions cover genre, price fairness, professional appearance of pages, and potential for purchase.
The document discusses how the author addressed their audience when creating a music magazine called "Unplugged". For the front cover, they used bold colors like red, green, and black which are associated with pop punk music. Images on the cover showed the subject looking directly at the camera with an edgy expression. The contents page also used these colors and included intriguing images of bands and artists. Descriptions of articles were included to entice readers. For the double page spread, the author wrote in an informal yet simple style using short paragraphs and a pull quote to engage a target audience of 16-25 year olds.
The document discusses how a media product magazine cover uses and follows the conventions of real media magazines. It includes elements such as a masthead with a unique large font, a full-page artist image, largest artist name as the main cover line with a description, multiple smaller cover lines promoting other articles, a small barcode with price/date/issue, a positioning statement, and different fonts to distinguish important elements. The layout and inclusion of these standard codes and conventions means the magazine cover closely resembles real media products without challenging conventions.
This document discusses distributing a new pop/rock music magazine. It suggests distributing the magazine through Times Inc, as they currently only distribute two magazines, leaving a gap that this new magazine could fill. It would be sold both online and in stores at supermarkets and local newsagents like Tesco, Asda, and Sainsbury's, as most people buy magazines from those locations. The distribution through Times Inc and sale in stores and online would provide access to potential readers and sales.
The document discusses how the language, images, and cover lines were designed to attract the target audience of 13 to 21-year-olds for a double page spread. Informal language, images featuring young and fashionable people, and bright colors were used. Cover lines included multiple boy band names in black and red text to appeal to the target audience of teenage girls.
The document discusses various technologies the author used to construct their media coursework project. They used Blogger to upload coursework and type some pieces, ºÝºÝߣshare to upload powerpoints, Photoshop to create their front cover and add text and images, Quark Xpress to create their contents page and double page spread and add text, images and color, YouTube to upload and embed videos onto Blogger, and ESurv to conduct and upload surveys for research. The author gained experience using these technologies and developed skills in Photoshop, Quark Xpress, and uploading/embedding various media types onto their blog.
The document discusses how the magazine attracts and addresses its audience. It uses several design elements on the front cover to attract readers such as cover lines, large artist names in red, and a large central image. The red color scheme indicates it is a rock magazine. Inside, feature articles use bold artist names and large images. Headlines and standfirsts are short to entice readers to learn more. The double page spreads use large images and headlines to draw readers in, with short introductory paragraphs. The article text includes direct quotes from bands in an informal tone to create interaction between artists and readers.
This media project is a magazine that represents teenage girls and young women ages 13-21. It features photographs of young female pop/rock artists on the cover and boy bands in the contents page. The language and fashion portrayed in the photographs are geared toward teenagers. The magazine does not target any specific racial group, and aims to represent normal working class people.
Dr. Ansari Khurshid Ahmed- Factors affecting Validity of a Test.pptxKhurshid Ahmed Ansari
Ìý
Validity is an important characteristic of a test. A test having low validity is of little use. Validity is the accuracy with which a test measures whatever it is supposed to measure. Validity can be low, moderate or high. There are many factors which affect the validity of a test. If these factors are controlled, then the validity of the test can be maintained to a high level. In the power point presentation, factors affecting validity are discussed with the help of concrete examples.
The document discusses design elements commonly found in music magazines, including:
- Using 2-3 contrasting colors for the color scheme and black and white for text to make content easy to read.
- Including images related to articles to make pages less boring and more attractive while creating the illusion of less text.
- Larger font sizes for article headings to make band/artist names more noticeable than other text.
- Small page numbers in contrasting colors to stand out but identify the page information is on.
- The largest font for the "contents" title to easily identify what page it is.
The document discusses the key design elements of a magazine cover, including the masthead, main image, coverlines, barcode, price/date/issue number, splash, positioning statement, skyline, fonts, and color scheme. The masthead contains the magazine title in a large, unique font at the top of the cover. The main image, usually featuring a well-known person, is the largest and aims to draw attention. Coverlines in contrasting colors around the image tease the content within. Smaller design elements like the barcode and pricing information do not distract from the focal points. Colorful graphics and statements are used to incentivize purchasing the magazine.
The magazine represents several social groups, including gender by including both male and female images, age by focusing on people ages 16-17, and fashion/style through the trendy indie rock outfits featured. The informal writing style also aims to attract readers by providing a relaxed tone. Overall, the magazine tries to appeal to different groups through inclusive representation and relatable content.
This document profiles three potential members of the target audience for a media product:
- Georgia Ozanne, a 17-year-old who loves going to concerts and uses Spotify to keep up with the latest music trends. Her favorite band is Catfish and the Bottlemen.
- Annabel Furby, a 17-year-old college student who enjoys baking, reading, and listening to music. She goes to 5-6 concerts per year and enjoys the live music experience. Her favorite song is "7" by Catfish and the Bottlemen.
- Jack Ratcliffe, a 17-year-old who attends college and plays in the band. He has diverse music tastes and uses Spotify to
The document summarizes the strengths, weaknesses, and tools used in creating a double-page skills development spread. The layout and color scheme were strengths that grabbed attention. A weakness was the lack of inserts to break up text. Importing text and images was easy, but saving the double pages caused issues. The main tool used was the text tool to control font sizes, colors, and styles within the chosen color scheme.
The student created a cover for a music magazine using Photoshop. They succeeded in following conventions like using a masthead font related to the genre and including bands their target audience would like. Their design improved from their initial sketch. They learned to use Photoshop with minimal teacher help to create a relatively professional product. Their weakness was time management, as they struggled to finish in the allotted time. Moving layers and making the masthead disappear behind the cover star were the most difficult elements. Since their preliminary task, the student has become more confident using Photoshop through repetition. They better understand conventions and can structure covers to suit audiences.
The survey results showed that the magazine appealed to its target audience of 16-25 year old females. 81% of respondents correctly identified the genre, and most felt the cover image, colors, and fonts were appealing. The cover star was seen as tying in with the magazine's indie style. Layout, articles, colors and fonts on interior pages were also well-liked. The article provided information, and colors and images were engaging. Consistent color schemes linked pages. Most felt the price was fair. The front cover was seen as the most professionally designed part of the magazine.
1) The respondent conducted a survey to get feedback on their pop punk music magazine called "Unplugged". Most respondents were between ages 16-25 and female, fitting the target audience.
2) When asked if the magazine was worth £2.99, 18 out of 20 respondents said yes.
3) All 20 respondents said competitions in the magazine would persuade them to purchase it.
4) Across various questions, images were most appealing part of the cover, contents page, and article spreads - showing the visual design was effective.
5) Most respondents said the magazine conveyed the pop punk genre as intended. All said they would be interested in reading it and that it fits the 16-25
An audience feedback survey was conducted for a music magazine. The majority of respondents were 16-25 year old males who found the magazine appealing. Most found the bands on the front cover and articles appealing. The majority said the genre was acoustic and the £3.99 price was reasonable. Most said all pages looked professional and they would consider buying it in a supermarket.
I learned several new techniques in Photoshop, including how to manually focus a camera and import fonts. I also gained experience using Quark to create double page spreads. Through completing this magazine project myself rather than as part of a team, I took on many roles and learned the significant work involved in production. Some specific skills I learned were how to manipulate image size in Photoshop, import pictures and resize them, create text boxes, insert drop caps and line breaks. For my blog evaluating this project, I used PowerPoint, Prezi and videos to make it visually interesting and go into depth on topics.
This document contains a survey with questions about demographics, opinions on magazine design elements, genre, price, and likelihood of purchase. Respondents are asked their age, gender, and if the magazine appeals to them. They are then asked what design aspects on the front cover, contents page, and double page spread appeal to them. Additional questions cover genre, price fairness, professional appearance of pages, and potential for purchase.
The document discusses how the author addressed their audience when creating a music magazine called "Unplugged". For the front cover, they used bold colors like red, green, and black which are associated with pop punk music. Images on the cover showed the subject looking directly at the camera with an edgy expression. The contents page also used these colors and included intriguing images of bands and artists. Descriptions of articles were included to entice readers. For the double page spread, the author wrote in an informal yet simple style using short paragraphs and a pull quote to engage a target audience of 16-25 year olds.
The document discusses how a media product magazine cover uses and follows the conventions of real media magazines. It includes elements such as a masthead with a unique large font, a full-page artist image, largest artist name as the main cover line with a description, multiple smaller cover lines promoting other articles, a small barcode with price/date/issue, a positioning statement, and different fonts to distinguish important elements. The layout and inclusion of these standard codes and conventions means the magazine cover closely resembles real media products without challenging conventions.
This document discusses distributing a new pop/rock music magazine. It suggests distributing the magazine through Times Inc, as they currently only distribute two magazines, leaving a gap that this new magazine could fill. It would be sold both online and in stores at supermarkets and local newsagents like Tesco, Asda, and Sainsbury's, as most people buy magazines from those locations. The distribution through Times Inc and sale in stores and online would provide access to potential readers and sales.
The document discusses how the language, images, and cover lines were designed to attract the target audience of 13 to 21-year-olds for a double page spread. Informal language, images featuring young and fashionable people, and bright colors were used. Cover lines included multiple boy band names in black and red text to appeal to the target audience of teenage girls.
The document discusses various technologies the author used to construct their media coursework project. They used Blogger to upload coursework and type some pieces, ºÝºÝߣshare to upload powerpoints, Photoshop to create their front cover and add text and images, Quark Xpress to create their contents page and double page spread and add text, images and color, YouTube to upload and embed videos onto Blogger, and ESurv to conduct and upload surveys for research. The author gained experience using these technologies and developed skills in Photoshop, Quark Xpress, and uploading/embedding various media types onto their blog.
The document discusses how the magazine attracts and addresses its audience. It uses several design elements on the front cover to attract readers such as cover lines, large artist names in red, and a large central image. The red color scheme indicates it is a rock magazine. Inside, feature articles use bold artist names and large images. Headlines and standfirsts are short to entice readers to learn more. The double page spreads use large images and headlines to draw readers in, with short introductory paragraphs. The article text includes direct quotes from bands in an informal tone to create interaction between artists and readers.
This media project is a magazine that represents teenage girls and young women ages 13-21. It features photographs of young female pop/rock artists on the cover and boy bands in the contents page. The language and fashion portrayed in the photographs are geared toward teenagers. The magazine does not target any specific racial group, and aims to represent normal working class people.
Dr. Ansari Khurshid Ahmed- Factors affecting Validity of a Test.pptxKhurshid Ahmed Ansari
Ìý
Validity is an important characteristic of a test. A test having low validity is of little use. Validity is the accuracy with which a test measures whatever it is supposed to measure. Validity can be low, moderate or high. There are many factors which affect the validity of a test. If these factors are controlled, then the validity of the test can be maintained to a high level. In the power point presentation, factors affecting validity are discussed with the help of concrete examples.
Blind spots in AI and Formulation Science, IFPAC 2025.pdfAjaz Hussain
Ìý
The intersection of AI and pharmaceutical formulation science highlights significant blind spots—systemic gaps in pharmaceutical development, regulatory oversight, quality assurance, and the ethical use of AI—that could jeopardize patient safety and undermine public trust. To move forward effectively, we must address these normalized blind spots, which may arise from outdated assumptions, errors, gaps in previous knowledge, and biases in language or regulatory inertia. This is essential to ensure that AI and formulation science are developed as tools for patient-centered and ethical healthcare.
One Click RFQ Cancellation in Odoo 18 - Odoo ºÝºÝߣsCeline George
Ìý
In this slide, we’ll discuss the one click RFQ Cancellation in odoo 18. One-Click RFQ Cancellation in Odoo 18 is a feature that allows users to quickly and easily cancel Request for Quotations (RFQs) with a single click.
Inventory Reporting in Odoo 17 - Odoo 17 Inventory AppCeline George
Ìý
This slide will helps us to efficiently create detailed reports of different records defined in its modules, both analytical and quantitative, with Odoo 17 ERP.
Hannah Borhan and Pietro Gagliardi OECD present 'From classroom to community ...EduSkills OECD
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Hannah Borhan, Research Assistant, OECD Education and Skills Directorate and Pietro Gagliardi, Policy Analyst, OECD Public Governance Directorate present at the OECD webinar 'From classroom to community engagement: Promoting active citizenship among young people" on 25 February 2025. You can find the recording of the webinar on the website https://oecdedutoday.com/webinars/
Comprehensive Guide to Antibiotics & Beta-Lactam Antibiotics.pptxSamruddhi Khonde
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📢 Comprehensive Guide to Antibiotics & Beta-Lactam Antibiotics
🔬 Antibiotics have revolutionized medicine, playing a crucial role in combating bacterial infections. Among them, Beta-Lactam antibiotics remain the most widely used class due to their effectiveness against Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria. This guide provides a detailed overview of their history, classification, chemical structures, mode of action, resistance mechanisms, SAR, and clinical applications.
📌 What You’ll Learn in This Presentation
✅ History & Evolution of Antibiotics
✅ Cell Wall Structure of Gram-Positive & Gram-Negative Bacteria
✅ Beta-Lactam Antibiotics: Classification & Subtypes
✅ Penicillins, Cephalosporins, Carbapenems & Monobactams
✅ Mode of Action (MOA) & Structure-Activity Relationship (SAR)
✅ Beta-Lactamase Inhibitors & Resistance Mechanisms
✅ Clinical Applications & Challenges.
🚀 Why You Should Check This Out?
Essential for pharmacy, medical & life sciences students.
Provides insights into antibiotic resistance & pharmaceutical trends.
Useful for healthcare professionals & researchers in drug discovery.
👉 Swipe through & explore the world of antibiotics today!
🔔 Like, Share & Follow for more in-depth pharma insights!
Effective Product Variant Management in Odoo 18Celine George
Ìý
In this slide we’ll discuss on the effective product variant management in Odoo 18. Odoo concentrates on managing product variations and offers a distinct area for doing so. Product variants provide unique characteristics like size and color to single products, which can be managed at the product template level for all attributes and variants or at the variant level for individual variants.
Unit 1 Computer Hardware for Educational Computing.pptxRomaSmart1
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Computers have revolutionized various sectors, including education, by enhancing learning experiences and making information more accessible. This presentation, "Computer Hardware for Educational Computing," introduces the fundamental aspects of computers, including their definition, characteristics, classification, and significance in the educational domain. Understanding these concepts helps educators and students leverage technology for more effective learning.