Educational Graphics Creation

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Summary

Educational graphics creation is the process of designing visuals—such as diagrams, infographics, and slide decks—to clarify, summarize, and communicate learning materials. This approach helps break down complex information for students, researchers, and educators using accessible, visually engaging formats.

  • Match visuals to content: Choose the right graphic style and layout to suit the topic, whether it’s a scientific diagram, narrative storyboard, or summary infographic.
  • Use simple elements: Keep text concise and pair it with recognizable icons or images to make ideas easy to understand at a glance.
  • Explore creation tools: Utilize platforms like Canva, NotebookLM, BioRender, or Google Slides to quickly build and organize educational visuals from your source material.
Summarized by AI based on LinkedIn member posts
  • View profile for Holly Clark

    AI in Education Strategist. Speaker, Author and Podcaster. Helping educators unlock the power of AI to spark curiosity, creativity, and unforgettable learning

    10,303 followers

    If you thought the pace of AI in education was slowing down, this week proved otherwise. We aren't just seeing the release of faster models; we are seeing tools that fundamentally change how we create learning materials and how students collaborate. What is new? Chat GPT 5.1, Gemini 3, Nano Banana Pro just to start We are moving past the phase of using AI simply to "write text." We are entering a phase of multimodal workflow! Here is the breakdown of the major releases this week and what they mean for the classroom: 1. The End of "Gibberish" in Educational Visuals Google has released Nano Banana Pro, and for educators, this is a massive leap forward. Until now, generating images for class often meant dealing with garbled text or hallucinated details. What changed? This new model integrates Google Search and "world knowledge." It can handle complex infographics, accurate text rendering, and precise diagrams. The Education Impact: Teachers can now generate accurate anatomy diagrams ("visual anatomy of a car with labeled parts"), historical storyboards (e.g., manga-style scenes for literature), or complex charts and all with legible, correct labels. It’s finally usable for creating legitimate study materials and handouts. 2. Lesson Planning Quietly tucked into the updates was a game-changer for NotebookLM. It now integrates these image generation capabilities to create Infographics and Slide Decks directly from your source material. The Education Impact: Imagine feeding a research paper or a textbook chapter into NotebookLM and instantly generating a visual slide deck or a summary infographic for your students. The time-saved on resource creation is going to be astronomical. 3. Collaborative AI is Here OpenAI has rolled out ChatGPT Group Chats to all tiers. This allows up to 20 users to collaborate in a single thread with the AI. PLC Group Projects: Teachers can brainstorm with the AI acting as a moderator or idea generator. Departments can co-plan curriculum in a shared thread where the AI maintains the context of the entire unit. 💡 Why this matters Whether it is visualizing a complex science concept with Nano Banana Pro or hosting a 20-person Socratic seminar in a ChatGPT group thread, the walls between "creation" and "learning" are getting thinner. #EdTech #AIinEducation #FutureOfLearning #Google #OpenAI

  • View profile for Rajni Garg

    Associate Professor of Chemistry | Researcher | AI Enthusiast

    13,639 followers

    Ph.D. scholars and researchers, ever wondered how to transform your research into a powerful visual summary that grabs attention at first glance? Do you feel lost when journals ask for a graphical abstract? Let's decode this essential skill for academic publishing in simple steps: 1. Understand the journal requirements Every journal has specific format rules, including dimensions, resolution, file type, and scope. Always begin by reviewing the author guidelines. 2. Define the core message Your graphical abstract must communicate your main research finding. Keep your focus clear and centered around one strong idea. 3. Choose the visual flow Decide on a logical structure (linear, cyclical, or branching) that reflects your study's flow. Use this layout to guide the viewer's eye through the process. 4. Sketch the layout (storyboard style) Organize your graphic in 3–5 sections: background, methods, results, and impact. A quick sketch helps organize ideas before design. 5. Use simple text and icons Avoid long text. Use short labels and familiar icons to represent steps, processes, and outcomes. 6. Visualize key results Incorporate one key result visually. This result is in your spotlight, so ensure it's concise and stands out in the design. 7. Ensure visual consistency Use uniform fonts, line styles, and color palettes. Keep it clean and consistent for a professional appearance. 8. Add a Highlight (optional) A short concluding phrase can summarize the impact of your research. This feature helps anchor your message for viewers. 9. Export the final image Save your image in the correct format and resolution. Your work should be high-quality for both print and online display. 10. Get feedback before submitting Share your design with peers or mentors to ensure it communicates effectively. Honest feedback can enhance your final version. Bonus takeaway: Tools like BioRender, Canva, Powerpoint, and Adobe Creative Cloud can simplify the design process, even for beginners! 💬 Comment below if you've ever struggled creating a graphical abstract or share your favorite design tip! Let's help each other level up in science communication. #ResearchMadeEasy #Abstract #GraphicalAbstract #PaperPublication #AcademicSuccess

  • View profile for Samira Hosseini

    Build authority through top-tier publications | Faculty Trainer I Founder, Autonomous Academic Accelerator (AAA) | Editor-in-chief, AIAIE | President, SAMYRAD | ACC Coach, International Coaching Federation

    86,488 followers

    Most researchers focus on writing. But the most persuasive part of your paper might not be in the words. I spend 30% of my paper preparation time on the core. The core of every paper is the results. It’s in the visuals, images, tables, graphs, and schemes. The results section isn’t just data. It’s your story engine. Here is a list of tools you can use to bring your story to life: ► Scientific illustration libraries & stock resources: The Noun Project: A Wide variety of icons, some suitable for simplified scientific representations. https://lnkd.in/eJyxwdh7 Bioicons: Specifically designed biological and medical icons. https://bioicons.com/ Freepik: Large collection of vectors and illustrations, including some scientific and medical content. https://www.freepik.com/ Simplify Sciences Publishing: Scientific illustrations and templates. https://lnkd.in/ebM5a4rg Servier Medical Art by Servier: Free, high-quality medical and biological illustrations. https://smart.servier.com/ ►Web-based tools (with illustration capabilities): Canva: A user-friendly design platform with vector elements and templates that are suitable for simpler scientific diagrams. https://www.canva.com Google Slides: Basic drawing tools for creating simple diagrams within presentations. https://lnkd.in/enPvsS6A Miro: A collaborative whiteboard platform with shapes and connectors is useful for creating conceptual diagrams and flowcharts. https://miro.com/ Biorender: A Specialized web-based tool with a large library of biological icons and templates for creating professional life science illustrations. https://www.biorender.com/ draw.io (now diagrams.net): Free, open-source diagramming tool for flowcharts and schematics. https://app.diagrams.net/ ► Installed software (advanced illustration): Adobe Illustrator: Industry-standard vector graphics software. https://lnkd.in/e9KY6KuE INKSCAPE: Free and open-source vector graphics editor, a powerful alternative to Adobe Illustrator. https://inkscape.org/ CorelDRAW Graphics Suite: Professional vector illustration suite (subscription and one-time purchase options). https://lnkd.in/ecPyAZmN ImageJ: Primarily for image processing and analysis in life sciences, but has basic annotation and drawing tools. https://imagej.net/ij/ Affinity Designer: Professional vector graphics software, a one-time purchase alternative to Adobe Illustrator. https://lnkd.in/epg2cDfh ► Specialized Installed Software: ChemDraw: For drawing chemical structures and pathways. https://lnkd.in/eqhhViW8 PyMOL: For 3D molecular visualization. https://www.pymol.org/ UCSF ChimeraX: Advanced molecular visualization. https://lnkd.in/eydbWgWF CellDesigner: For drawing biochemical networks and pathways. https://lnkd.in/e_QE9jsX ________ 📌 If what you need is proven strategy, support, and a community to grow in your academic journey, 𝗕𝗼𝗼𝗸 𝗮 𝗳𝗿𝗲𝗲 𝗰𝗮𝗹𝗹 𝘁𝗼 𝗮𝗽𝗽𝗹𝘆: https://lnkd.in/e-HnrCQW

  • View profile for Mark Anderson FCCT

    The ICT Evangelist. Multiple #1 Best-Selling Author and award-winning blogger/writer. Presenter and keynote speaker (400+).

    10,249 followers

    I've been exploring the new features in NotebookLM, and the Infographics Creation tool is genuinely brilliant in so many ways, particularly for processing dense materials. For the first time, we can now generate clean infographics straight from our notes or documents. This is ideal for quickly distilling complex information. You simply upload your content, and NotebookLM pulls the key ideas into a visual summary. This feature offers a huge boost to dual coding and makes complex principles clear. That infographic tool really helps ensure that difficult concepts are summarised in a way that your students can easily understand. It drastically cuts down the time spent creating accessible study materials. Need to quickly organise complex research or materials? Alongside generating infographics, you can now also access other powerful new tools, such as the ability to upload photos of textbook pages or handwritten notes, or generate Slide Decks complete with structure and scripts (downside: it's not possible to edit slides, or at least not that I can see). Anyway, if you're looking to streamline your workflow and help with your resource creation, NotebookLM’s tools are essential. I thought I'd walk the talk and use the tool to make the following infographic highlighting some of what I think are its key features. Let me know what you think! #NotebookLM #Infographics #Productivity #EdTech #AIinEDU #AIinEducation

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