I've spent the last few days using some of my spare time to create word clouds to reflect various aspects of my life. Word clouds can be described as visual representations for text data, typically used to depict keywords in a document as free form text. Wordsare normally displayed as singles and are often listed alphabetically, with the importance, relevance or frequency of the word shown via font size or color. This format is useful for quickly perceiving the most prominent terms in the text and for locating a specific word to determine its relative prominence.
I began using word clouds as a means to identify keywords in job descriptions so I could match my personally published key words accordingly. I soon discovered that the tools I found had many other uses as well. Word clouds can give one a visual picture of themselves by cutting and pasting a block of copy one has used to describe themself, like a resume for example. I used the copy in my LinkedIn Profile to create this word cloud as a visual descriptor for my employment history.Next, I began to think of other uses, like the word cloud I built to describe a Cursillo or Pilgrimage weekend. Using the comments left on the http://www.days3.com website by Presbyterian Cursillo participants after their participant weekend, I cut and pasted the comments into a word cloud generator to produce a visual picture of Cursillo.
In her blog this morning, my friend Lil Smith built a word cloud created from a daily prayer routine, naming all of the names for Christ she could identify. Check out her prayer word cloud blog today at http://bit.ly/nxQH2V.
I believe the possibilities are not only endless, but fun for a visual learner like me.
I recommend using the free on-line program called Wordle at http://www.wordle.com. Word clouds can be printed to a .pdf format and used in a multitude of ways. They can be created in a variety of colors and shapes by your design. Be cautious about saving Word clouds you create to Wordle as public files, unless you are ready for them to be seen by the whole world. But then again... you may have found a good way to evangelize in the 21st Century!
Blessings for now...
Kent
sdg

