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WikiLearn - Organizer Lab V2 – Designing campaigns and other Topics for Impact projects - html: Text

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description"html in Organizer Lab V2 – Designing campaigns and other Topics for Impact projects - Learn the skills Topics for Impact organizers need to run consistent, high-impact campaigns that invite new contributors, partners, and supporters to the movement. "
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content"<p></p> <h3><strong><img width="8%" src="/static/ideation_4x.png" alt="" />Mapping the ideas and finding a path.</strong></h3> <table> <tbody> <tr> <td> <p>Mindmapping</p> <p>Called radiant thinking or a cloud of ideas, Mind mapping is an organized tool for project development or addressing project-related challenges. This approach enables us to efficiently put ideas into connections and ways to see the issues or subject matter better. Beginning with a central term or concept, we can promptly visualize and organize interconnected ideas and components.</p> <p>To enhance the use of these tools, one of the initial steps involves reviewing all the words generated during brainstorming. The objective is to identify words that have higher significance or resonate most strongly with the task (sometimes, you’ll find repeated words). Once you pinpoint these key terms, you’ll look for the most significant one, and you can connect with other words and create branches (or paths) to represent related concepts.</p> <p>This tool would help you to find and see which of these ideas can get the potential to imagine the project you might work on and to have others prototype in case you feel you need to go back to this process.</p> </td> <td> <h3>How to Make a Mind Map</h3> <p><strong>1. focus.</strong> Place one element at the center of the page.</p> <p><strong>2. Branch out.</strong> Create a web of association around the core phase or image. Use simple words.</p> <p><strong>3. Organize.</strong> The main branches of your map can represent categories such as synonyms, antonyms, related compound words, clichés, phrases, and so on. Try to use different colors for each branch you build.</p> <p><strong>4. Subdivide.</strong> Each main branch can feed smaller subcategories. Work quickly using the process to free up your mind. One idea can take you to another branch.</p> <pre><span style="font-family: 'courier new', courier;">Lupton, E. (2011). Graphic Design Thinking: Beyond Brainstorming.</span></pre> </td> </tr> </tbody> </table>"