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Surface Questions:

1. What are some of the similarities between the original paragraph style
writing and the word cloud?
Almost all the ideas are represented in key words. There is nothing more.
Also capitalization.
2. What are some of the differences?
The word cloud is kind of missy, however the writing was well organized.
3. What words are larger and more emphasized?
Angelina, displaced, refugees,
4. Are these words that are important to the original message/intent? How
so?
The most repeated and important words that support the writing. The
written piece was about Angelina Jolie and her support to refugees and
displaced.
5. What shape did the word cloud take, if any? What does it imply or lead
to you to think about, if anything?
6. What colors did you end up with? How do these colors set tone or intent

for your word cloud?


Context Questions:
7. How does moving from composing/paragraph style, to the word cloud
style, change the message of your statement? How so?
I dont think it changes the statement, but it makes it more general and less
specific.
8. What is the use of moving from a paragraph structure to a cloud (or
other) structure in writing? How so?
-It makes the writer refresh his mind and connect the dots, which provide
new ideas or details.
9. How could you apply this to your personal writing processes during
drafting or composing, even revising?
-When I think to elaborate or add new things, I can look for the most used
word an elaborate in those ideas. Also if there is words used less and are
important I can elaborate on.
10. So, overall, what did you think? Interesting experiment or total waste of
time? Somewhere in-between? Please elaborate why so.
-It is interesting; it can be used in revising and also in the writing process, if
the writer divides the work.

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