|
click on any image
to get a bigger view
click the larger
image to return

Layout
Lettering
Drawing
Symbols
Models
Listening
Holding
Attention
|
|

Topics
covered on this page:
Shapes
Graphic
Short-hand
Bean
People & Other Characters
MG
Taylor Models
As
with K-Walls, great
drawing ability is not necessary in a good scribe. But it is important
that you attempt to include some drawing in your scribing. Drawings
help some people to remember what is discussed. They provide entertainment
and help lighten the mood of serious discussions.
|
|
|
 

|
Most
people seem to enjoy
the "off the cuff" nature of
scribed drawings and are not
at all concerned about how
"good" the drawing is. Your
audience is a supportive one
and few people are themselves
in the position to critique
your drawings. And for that
tiny portion who do, let them
try to draw with thirty people
watching!
|
|
Shapes
It's good to practice drawing simple shapes, three-dimensional shapes,
and attractive arrows, because these elements may be frequently
used to spice up wordy discussions. There are many "how to
draw" books on the market which can teach you how to draw these
kinds of things. Two which we like to use at the Borgess Navigation
Center are Mark
Kistler's Draw Squad by Mark Kistler of PBS fame and Rapid
Viz by Kurt Hanks.
back to the top
|

|
|
Graphic
Short-Hand
Remember back in elementary school when you
had a small arsenal of images which you could draw anytime, anyplace,
upon request? Maybe a house with a tree in the yard, a yellow sun
which you always placed in the upper left hand corner of your paper,
a race car, rocket ship, horse, smiley face, or dog with floppy
tongue. Try to invent a new collection of images that you can use
in scribing.
Useful images could include: clocks,
stoplights, cars, keys, pencils, lightbulbs,
raining clouds, telephones, etc.
As you do more scribing, you'll find many of the same everyday
phrases being repeated during discussions and this may inspire more
short-hand images.
  
back to the top
|




|
|
Bean
People
MG Taylor Corporation has
had many creative people working for them over the years. Bean People
were the invention of xxxxxxx and are super useful characters to
learn to draw.
Show them pointing to concepts, leaning against words,
expressing emotion, playing different roles (especially with the
addition of things like cowboy hats or objects in their hands).
Bean People are made up of an oval head, oval body,
stick limbs, and little oval hands and feet. This simple formula
can yield enormously expressive results!
Experiment by drawing your Bean Guy running, dancing,
laughing, sleeping, crying, strolling, yelling, shaking hands with
another Bean Dude, etc.
back to the top
|



|
|
Create
other characters
Bean People may inspire you to come up with other signature characters
which you always use when scribing.
Maybe it's something
you've always drawn next to your signature or a cartoon you used
to doodle in high school. Choose something
that's easy to draw quickly and which you love to draw .
There are lots of books
and websites out there on cartooning and the drawing of characters.
Take a look at xxxxxx
back to the top
MG
Taylor Models
MG Taylor Models and axioms
are often used to illustrate ideas during discussions which are
scribed. More on axioms may be found at our own online Knowledge
Worker Manual ../../../KworkerManual/ePages/Resources/Axioms.htm
. More information about models, glyphs, and axioms may be found
at MG Taylor's website http://www.mgtaylor.com.
GLOSSARY
back
to the top
|






|
|