lunes, 18 de noviembre de 2013

~ VISUAL LEARNING ~





VISUAL LEARNING



What is a Visual Learning? 

The visual thinking is a learning style where the learner better understands and retains information when the ideas, words and concepts are associated with images. Research tells us that the majority of students in a regular classroom need to see information in order to learn it. We as a future teachers we have to take into account this useful learning for our future students.
Some common visual learning strategies include creating graphic organizers, diagramming, mind mapping, outlining... These strategies and more are being used in classrooms across the country. 




                                   



These strategies help our students of all ages to learn their objectives and achieve academic success. As students are required to evaluate and interpret information from a variety of sources, incorporate new knowledge with what they already have learned, and improve writing skills and think critically, visual learning tools help students meet those demands. Paired with the brain’s capacity for images, visual learning strategies help students better understand and retain information.




How does visual learning help students?


Visual learning helps students clarify their thoughts
Students see how the ideas are connected and they realize how information can be grouped and organized. With visual learning, new concepts are more thoroughly and easily understood when they are linked to prior knowledge.


Visual learning helps students organize and analyze information
The students can use diagrams and plots to display large amounts of information in ways that are easy to understand and help reveal relationships and patterns.


Visual learning helps students integrate new knowledge
According to research, the students remember better the information when it is represented and learned in both ways visually and verbally.


Visual learning helps students think critically
Linked verbal and visual information helps students to make connections, understand relationships and recall related details.


The visual learning research in both educational theory and cognitive psychology tells us that visual learning is among the very best methods for teaching students of all ages how to think and how to learn.












Visual Literacy

As future educators we have to explore new core competencies for 21st century learning. The importance of visual literacy is a reoccurring theme. How do we teach learners to interpret and create visual, digital, and audio media in a contemporary culture where media dominates, and how is visual literacy in education being redefined through technology? We have to begin looking for resources that would integrate visual literacy into their classroom.










TEACHING LITERACY THROUGH CINEMA







In this new post I would like to relate the teaching of literacy with the cinema. I would like to propose various and different activities relaed with films and the cinema to work in class with our students:


  • CHARACTER ACTING: A great way of encouraging children to think more about characters in stories.
    This activity is a wonderful drama game for children. They will really enjoy it!
    Each child choose a character from a book to act out (without speaking).
    The other children have to guess the character and explain their reasoning.
    

  • MEDIA AWARENESS: Analyse adverts, and try to make your own, with this enjoyable Literacy activity.
      Children were to think about an advert and what made them think about that.
      To watch a video full of adverts, then they have to discuss who they think the adverts are              made for.
      To design a table to categorise the adverts looking at when they would be shown.
      Children start planning their own adverts in small groups.
      To make the adverts. All adverts to be viewed by the children and a juding panel to decide          which advert is the best.


  • FILM MAKING: A wonderful way for children to work together in a wide variety of subjects.
    Children make group of five to make a film lasting about five minutes.


  • ANIMATION IDEAS: A number of ideas for using animation in the classroom.

  • SOUNDTRACKS: A range of activities which focus on the soundtracks of movies and games.













To end this post I write here some quotes from film celebrities that I would like to share with you:


"If students aren't taught the language of sound and images, shouldn't they be considered as illiterate as if they left college without being able to read or write?"

~ George Lucas, filmmaker


"If one wants to reach younger people at an earlier age to shape their minds in a critical way, you really need to know how ideas and emotions are expressed visually"
~ Martin Scorsese, director and filmmaker

















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