Question 2: Identifying presentational features
The second question relates to the way
the text looks. To get all the marks on this question you need to do two
things:
1.
List the
presentational devices the text uses.
2.
Explain why
these devices are used and what effect they have.
To answer the first part of the question
you need be able to recognise presentational devices such as:
·
Headings (titles) and
sub-headings
·
Photos
·
Pictures
·
Illustrations
·
Font size and style (bold,
italic etc…)
·
Colour
·
Layout features (bullets, boxed
text)
·
Structure (short or long
paragraphs)
·
Quotations (things people said
either in quotation marks or highlighted in the text)
A good way of revising is to analyse any
text you see or read. Pick up a magazine and look at a page at random. You
should be able to spot a whole range of devices being used.
Why presentational devices are
used
The devices used depend on:
·
Purpose - what the text is trying to do (e.g. inform,
advise, persuade).
·
Audience - who it is trying to talk to (e.g. children,
adults, men, women).
Choices in layout (such as the use of
pictures, diagrams and lists) are made to meet a specific purpose and communicate
with a specific audience. Choices in colour and font, for example, can be
made to appeal to a specific target group. You might use lively colours and
playful fonts in a text for kids and more serious fonts and colours for adults.
Different presentational devices create different effects.
Remember: there are
three main reasons for using presentational devices: mood, memory, clarity.
Mood
A piece of writing will always try to
express feelings. The mood created could be fun and excitement (e.g. in a
brochure for a theme park) or perhaps fear and concern (e.g. in an advice sheet
about road safety). The feelings should always be in tune with the target
audience.
Devices to look out for in mood:
·
Pictures
·
Fonts
·
Colour
·
Quotes
Memory
If the main purpose of a piece of
non-fiction writing is to inform, then it is important that readers
find and remember key bits of information. These can include website addresses
or phone numbers, advice or statistics.
Devices to look out for that are used to
aid memory:
·
Bold text
·
Headlines and sub headings
·
Bullet points
·
Diagrams, maps and
illustrations
Clarity
Most non-fiction texts are written for
people in a hurry, so it is important that the purpose and audience of a text
is clear. This will make the right people pick it up and read it. The
information within the text also needs to be clearly presented otherwise people
will stop reading.
Devices to look out for to aid clarity:
·
Bold text
·
Bullet points
·
Sub-headings
·
Paragraphs
·
Colour
·
Images and captions
·
Quotes
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