Visual thinking engages the use of visual aids to deliver educational content more effectively. Using even simple visuals is a great way to illustrate the major topics that will be taught. Just hearing information is not enough for most learners to retain it, so visual aids help to receive and retain information. Visual aids have the ability to stimulate and maintain the learners’ interest, simplify teaching, accelerate learning and reinforce the material being studied.
There are a number of benefits in using visual aids in teaching language. The first is visual thinking makes complex information easier to understand. Thanks to visual aids students can see the connection between ideas, and realize how this information can be organized or grouped. With visual aids, new concepts are more easily for understanding. Learners can use diagrams or other visual aids to display large amounts of information in ways that are easy to comprehend and help reveal relationships and patterns. Sometime using only words can hide the true meaning or purpose of the message. This leads to misunderstanding. But using the combination of words, pictures, charts and other visual aids allow deliver the original idea.
The next benefit is that visual thinking enhances learning. Visual aids are used to reinforce the content being learned. Effects and colours can be customized to assist students better understand the content of the subject. Visual aids bring the real thing closer to the students. They make learning experiences more natural and realistic.
Visual aids make the learning process more interesting for pupils. Visual learning is a good way to increase learners’ interest in a certain subject. Visual aids break the ordinary cycle in settings like cla...
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...fragment. The learners are supposed to guess what the video is about, and discuss it in the classroom.
Teaching listening is vital for learners. Because listening skills are the most frequently used. Most language learners want to be able to understand what people are saying to them in English, either face-to-face, on TV or on the radio, in theatres and cinemas, or on tape, CDs or other recorded media. [31] Listening skills are ways to help learners listen to something more effectively. The example of activity for listening is to watch movie in English, without subtitles. Even if learners cannot understand what the character is speaking, thanks to the video they can guess.
Works Cited
30. Harri Daniel, Benefits of Visual Learning, http://benefitof.net/benefits-of-visual-learning/, 2011 viewed: 10/05/14
31. Harmer, J., How to teach English, Pearson Longman, 2007
There is no lack of visual aids in this video. The entire video is filled with graphs and animation. The use of graphs alone may not have kept the audience as involved. Each graph is presented and is seemingly linked to next through smooth animations. The graphs are presented in a array of colors. However, the colors aren’t to busy as this may strew viewers away from watching all six minutes. The unique pairing of graphs and animation creates a smooth transition from topic to topic. This allows for the audience to follow the meaning of the video. All graphs are explained through the voice-over and a key is also presented. This allowed for the information to broadcasted to the audience clearly and meaningfully. The simplistic way in which this is done is of great value to understanding of the topic to the audience.
The visual learners prefer to use pictures, images, maps, colors, and spatial intelligence, which assist them to arrange their information, interact with others and give them a great sense of direction. They are great at accumulating information, curious and inquisitive due to the fact that without adequate information, the portrait of what they are learning will be imperfect. They are also enthusiastic about theory and facts; system diagram helps them to visualize the connection between parts of a system; story method assists them to learn by heart the content that cannot be seen easily. (Garner, 2012)
In conclusion, illustrations help set the proper mindset for your readers to accept the points you make. The perfect quote, example, or fact ties everything together for your readers and lets you continue sharing your thoughts because your readers are ready to receive them. Essentially, without the use of illustrations you are losing the opportunity to leave a strong impression on your reader and help them develop their opinions on the topic at hand.
My second preferred learning style, visual, relates more toward a cognitivist instructional method. The cognitivist perspective stat...
...help increase students’ learning by exercising the right and creative side of the brain and therefore balancing the activity of learning.
This must encourage you to use this ability in the best way. How? First step: reading more about this style. Second step: learning from other's experience. Third step: when you go to the library try to choose carefully books consist of pictures. For instance, There is a great book for visual children entitled vocabulary cartoons help them memorize words in a few minutes and never forget because it is full of pictures. It looks like a story book. Also, In the Mind's Eye: Visual Thinkers, Gifted People With Dyslexia and Other Learning Difficulties, Computer Images and the Ironies of Creativity. This book also helps those people who are using non-traditional way in learning to improve their level and provides answers of how computers contribute in visual learning style. A journey of a thousand miles begins with the first step. Learning a second language is a long and hard journey. The strong car which will help you in this journey is your knowledge of who you are as a learner. To know if you are a visual learner or not. Ask yourself these questions: Do I prefer pictures in studying? Do I achieve inferior results in tasks which is relying on listening? Do I tend to draw the words which I try to memorize? For example, when I was in high school I remember myself when I was drawing the tips of any process in my materials to facilitate me memorizing in the exam and I was relying on mind maps in my
is helpful for people who think in a visual way. You can put your idea in a
When using slides, color contrast is another excellent way for a speaker to catch the audience’s attention! The C.R.A.P. design principles also can use shapes and symbols to convey a message. Visual elements using the four basic design principles are probably the most important pieces of information that should be carried through the presentation. Using visual elements, such as infographics, can contribute to how information can be remembered or memorized easiest by the audience. Images or infographics are great tools when promoting attention and retaining information. Images that are easy to comprehend, involve forming visual memories. They reinforce the process of memory recall and visual elements (Keogh,
So the method of teaching in primary schools is often focused on a verbal way of processing information, the teacher speaks and the child listens. However, visual thinkers prefer to see and do. That is where the teacher needs to get the best out of the visual thinkers in the classroom. With a computer or a tablet for example, a visual thinker can get started on learning materials that suit their learning
One example would be that a student in astronomy could learn about the solar system. How it works by touching planets, see the stars, and move into the space, track progress of a comet and more. This also allows them to see how concept work in the virtual environment. This is useful for students who have some particular learning ways, creative or those who find it easier to learn using colors, textures and symbols (Virtual Reality, 2009).
Many students are visual learners. By this, they need to see the information in front of them. Many teachers set up a PowerPoint on a projector and have students take notes. Yes, this is a good learning concept as we have to
Using videos in the classroom provides multiple avenues for learning. Not only do students learn by seeing, but this also helped students develop auditory skills to be able to listen. Because visual learners learn by seeing, I can use maps to help students better understand concepts in social studies or history. Seeing where the pioneers traveled as well as talking about the climate and harsh conditions will allow the students to make sense of how the people had to survive. Another way I can utilize my talents are making posters with eye-catching cartoon characters. This will provide an opportunity for me to be creative and draw, but also make the subjects more appealing for when the posters are hung in the classroom. Graphs will prove to be helpful in math because I can do an experience, but also mark the results using a chart to provide a visual. This will also provide lessons in visual, auditory, and kinesthetic learning. Graphic organizers will be used a lot to compare and contrast two stories. This will make it easier to see the differences and similarities. Using my graphic organizer as an example, students have an example of what their work should
According to psychologist, Robert E. Slavin (2008), “Your senses are usually wide open to all sorts of stimuli, or environmental events or conditions, but you are consciously aware of only a fraction of them at any one time” (p. 129). By looking at what Slavin stated about stimuli, we can infer that even though we are exposed to various stimuli everywhere we are at, we are only aware to a few of them, so it is important for educators to present students the right stimuli that will help students focus their attention and learn from them. For instance, I am a visual learner, so demonstrations, pictures, videos, charts, or diagrams, are all some kind of stimuli that can better help me learn. When I first started learning about psycholog...
Technology properly used in the classroom has many advantages to a student’s learning. Technology can help students become more involved in their own learning process, which is not seen in the traditional classroom. It allows them to master basic skills at their own rate rather than being left behind. Teachers and students alike can connect to real life situations by using technology in the classroom; this can also help to prepare students for real world situations. Technology can be used to motivate students as well as to offer more challenging opportunities. It can also be used as a visualization tool to keep students interested in the subject that is being taught. When technology is used effectively, students have the opportunity to develop skills that they may not get without the use of technology (Cleaver, 2011). Assessing and monitoring students is easier on the teacher because of the ability to use technology in the classroom. When technology is used correctly it offers limitless resources to a classroom atmosphere.
The corresponding Internet site for this textbook greatly improves the overall effect on the education of students. Students have quick access to any part of the text. They also receive visual and audio stimulation, which has been proven to increase the amount of information the student remembers. Some students are simply not strictly audio learners. Listening to a professor or teacher lecture sometimes just isn't enough for students. With the site they can review material quickly and easily and see the multimedia imagery at their own pace. Students can even take practice tests to see if they have learned the material.