Foundations of IT: Modular system for digital learning
Visual systems, illustration, motion design
Information technology powers modern organizations, shaping decisions, services, and innovation. To support a course designed to build foundational IT knowledge, I transformed complex concepts into clear, modular motion graphics that helped students engage with material that might otherwise feel abstract or overwhelming.
To ensure the series felt unified and efficient to produce, I designed a visual and motion system that established both structure and tone. Every piece followed the same rhythm: a brief introduction, a focused faculty insight, an animated explainer, and a closing reflection that tied the concept back to the larger course.
The outcome was a series that felt credible, cohesive, and genuinely useful for learners—and a scalable framework later adapted for additional courses and digital learning projects across the Center for Digital Education.
Visual system
I designed a geometric visual system in two modes: filled illustrations for instructional clarity and a stroked, blueprint-like treatment for title cards. Both draw from the same shapes and structures, allowing the system to scale quickly across the course.
Structure & workflow
I created a repeatable narrative structure to keep production consistent across all fourteen modules: title card → faculty introduction → animated explainer → why is it important → closing. This spine allowed me to focus on illustration and motion where they had the most impact, while the team worked within a shared, predictable framework.