“People learn more than half of what they know from visual information, but few schools have an explicit curriculum to show students . . . about visual data.” ~Mary Alice White, Columbia University researcher
Mary Alice wrote that quote during the nineteen eighties. Teachers are still learning and figuring out how to teach students visual literacy.
Visual Literacy is “the ability to interpret and understand visual texts, with "texts" being broadly defined as any print visual item, including artwork, picture books, advertising, web sites, or any other item that can be visually interpreted.” (Hommel, Riegler, & Uhlrich, n.d.) Students today are bombarded with images, text, and sound hundreds of times throughout the day. There is television, the World Wide Web, text messaging, smart phones, iPods, and whatever new device the engineers are dreaming up next sending information both good and bad to everyone who is linked into the information highway. We need to start or continue finding ways to integrate more images into our teaching so students can be connected to their learning.
Students today may be tech savvy, but they still need to learn what is real and what has been manipulated through electronic means. We all know the importance of pointing out to girls how cover models are photo-shopped and air brushed, but what about other images? (National Association of Anorexia Nervosa and Other Disorders) Recently a team of researchers decided to put out a fake story about the endangered tree octopus to see if students would figure out that this was obviously a fabricated story with a manipulated photo. Unfortunately the students believed the story because it was on the Internet! (Dykes, 2011)
We need our students to become critical and creative thinkers for the 21st century. Helping them learn how to analyze images will help them become more discerning about what they see and read on the Internet. There are two ways to teach our students visual literacy. The first way has teachers help students “decode visuals through analysis.” And the other way has students “encode visuals as a ways for communication.” (Stokes, n.d.) Students need to learn how to interpret what they are seeing as well as learn how to use images properly for classwork and for real life presentations after they have graduated.
Using appropriate images while we are presenting information is also important. Realizing that many of our students are visual learners, including visuals is very important. Visuals can include timelines, mindmapping, videos from the Internet, paintings, and photographs. Visuals can be a very broad term. I am getting better at including images with my lectures. For example, while I'm telling stories about World War I bombers I can show movies of the planes and how the dogfights actually looked like. Students can see videos of a caterpillar metamorphosing into a butterfly.
For visual-thinking creating mind-maps and timelines are very beneficial for students to see cause and effect, main ideas, and how ideas on a topic can be related. I intend to create a Venn Diagram with my students showing the similarities and differences between the play "A Raisin in the Sun" and the movie "Guess Who's Coming to Dinner." It is a very eye-opening essay for the students when they start asking questions about race relations in the fifties and sixties compared to today.
The Internet is very important in showing images to students. When I was a student teacher I spent a lot of money converting some Jacob A. Riis photographs into slides. My mentor teacher still has them. Thankfully those images can be viewed on the web and are a much higher quality than my slides. Being able to find images that are the perfect companion for lectures is always wonderful, especially when you don't have to leave your desk!
More Information:
To help students tell the difference between what is real and what has been edited, they can try this quiz: Autodesk: Fake or Foto Challenge
References
Daly, J. (n.d.) “Life on the screen: visual literacy in education.” Edutopia. Retrieved May 25, 2011 from http://www.edutopia.org/life-screen.
Dykes, B.M. (Feb., 2011). “’Tree octopus’ is latest evidence that internet is making kids dumb, says group.” The Lookout, a Yahoo News Blog. Retrieved May 24, 2001 from http://news.yahoo.com/s/yblog_thelookout/20110202/ts_yblog_thelookout/tree-octopus-is- latest-evidence-the-internet-is-making-kids-dumb-says-group.
Hommel, M., Riegler, B., and Ulrich, K. (n.d.) “Expanding the definition of visual literacy.” Retrieved May 25, 2011 from http://ccb.lis.illinois.edu/Projects/youth/literacies/lit_home.html.
Miller, K. (January, 2011). “Media advisory: schools facing learning crisis spawned by internet .” Austin, TX, Pearson. Retrieved May 23, 2011 from http://www.prweb.com/releases/2011/01 /prweb5010934.htm.
Stokes, S. (n.d.) “Visual Literacy in Teaching and Learning:A Literature Perspective.” Retrieved May 25, 2011 from http://ejite.isu.edu/Volume1No1/pdfs/stokes.pdf.
Actually, the picture of the red-tailed hawk carrying the octopus was in no way fabricated. I took this picture while kayaking on Tomales Bay. There had been a recent influx of fresh water from the winter rains that caused a die off in the octopi of Tomales Bay. They were washing up on shore, weakened. This red-tailed hawk found one that was still alive enough to move, was attracted to it, and carried it away for lunch. Please contact me before accusing me of photographic fraud next time.
ReplyDelete-Galen Leeds
Hello Galen.
ReplyDeleteI removed your image. I'm so sorry for the confusion. Obviously your photo was not a fake in anyway, and I'm sorry. I would just like to point out that the website that I found your image is a bogus site set up to fool students and make them think there is such a thing as a tree octopus. That is why there was confusion. You may want to contact their site as well so that others won't think the same thing. I'm sorry for the mistake.