Typography, Headlines and Infographics

(coco) #1

Your staff may choose to submit layouts and copy electronically, or
you may prefer to do the pasteup yourself. Most yearbook companies
accept digital images. Ask your yearbook representative how you should
submit the images; the company may require that images be in certain
formats or sizes.
Don’t be afraid to ask for help. The representative’s service is part of
what you’re paying for. One call may save hours of time redoing lay-
outs, may get the book done weeks earlier or may keep the staff within
budget.


YEARBOOKS AND MAGAZINES^411


Your Beat



  1. Imagine students looking at their yearbooks for the
    first time (or recall the scene, if you’ve experienced
    it). What will the students say first? What will the
    males say? The females? What will the athletes say?
    What will the freshmen say? What will the members
    of the speech team say? What will the teachers say?
    Why will each group say something different?

  2. Ask each member of the class to write down at least
    10 things he or she remembers about last year at
    your school that should be recorded in the yearbook.
    Compare your lists. What things appear on every-
    one’s lists? Which appear on only a few lists? Make
    a composite list on the board so everyone can see
    all the items. (Keep a copy of this list for planning
    the ladder.) Why are the lists different? Would other
    classes write down the same events you did? Ask
    a few teachers if you can use five minutes of their
    class time to have students from different age and
    interest areas write lists of the top 10 things each
    remembers about last year’s book. Compare these
    lists to your master list. Add things you have missed.

  3. Brainstorm to come up with a theme for your year-
    book. Begin by having each student write down the
    name of one music group that represents the whole
    school. List the groups on the board, and have each
    student explain the reason for his or her choice.


Continue the discussion until you have a consensus
on one group you believe is representative of the
school as a whole. Try the same thing with food,
colors and animals. Now that you have the idea of
choosingone noun from a category best represent-
ing your school, try it with action words and phrases.
Is your school energetic? New and improved? On
a roll? Breaking away from the crowd? Have each
student write three words or phrases that describe
the school. Discuss how each one might fit the year.
Select two or three you think might work. Use them
to complete Item 4.


  1. Design logos to represent the themes you chose in
    Item 3. Add colors that go with each theme. Sketch a
    cover using the theme, logo and colors you like best.

  2. Divide the class into groups of four or five. Give each
    group a ladder, and ask it to plan the yearbook using
    the list of contents from Item 2 and one of the themes
    chosen in Item 3 (or the theme for this year’s book,
    if you have one). Compare ladders. What are the dif-
    ferences? Combine the ladders to create one that the
    class agrees works best with the theme. (Don’t forget
    to allow for advertising and index sections, division
    pages, and opening and closing sections.)

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