Emphasizing important information in your multimodal project

When you look at a document, you’ll notice that some information is emphasized, or treated more prominently, to catch the reader’s attention or communicate a main idea. In print documents, emphasis is usually achieved by the placement of information on the page. Take a look at two documents, a résumé and a brochure. What information jumps out at you? What information do you think is the most important in each one?

When you examine the résumé, think about the context and purpose of a résumé. The “work” a résumé does is to “sell” the author—to best portray his or her abilities, skills, and experiences. In this résumé, the author emphasizes his name with boldface type and centered placement. He presents categories that will be of interest to his reader in a consistent way.

The brochure would appear folded, with the panel on the right as the “cover.” The emphasis is on a photograph of a puppy and a child. Why? The composer made choices to inspire the reader to act on behalf of the family pet.

Composers use different methods of emphasizing important information, depending on the type of composition they’re producing. If you have written traditional essays, you may be used to creating emphasis with your words and sentence structure—using phrases like “and most important” or “the strongest evidence yet.” In traditional essays, information is expressed in written words, and it’s up to your readers to be able to discern what information is critical without the aid of visual cues. When you compose multimodal essays, you’ll have to first determine what information is most important to emphasize, given your purpose and audience, and then how you can best emphasize that information, given your genre and modes.

Sample brochure

Sample résumé

Related topics:

Determining what needs emphasis

Choosing a strategy for creating emphasis