A picture is worth a thousand words : an approach to learning about visuals


Autoria(s): Carter, Merilyn Gladys; Hipwell, Patricia; Quinnell, Lorna
Data(s)

01/11/2012

Resumo

Students in the middle years encounter an increasing range of unfamiliar visuals. Visual literacy, the ability to encode and decode visuals and to think visually, is an expectation of all middle years curriculum areas and an expectation of NAPLAN literacy and numeracy tests. This article presents a multidisciplinary approach to teaching visual literacy that links the content of all learning areas and encourages students to transfer skills from familiar to unfamiliar contexts. It proposes a classification of visuals in six parts: one-dimensional; two-dimensional; map; shape; connection; and picture, based on the properties, rather than the purpose, of the visual. By placing a visual in one of these six categories, students learn to transfer the skills used to decode familiar visuals to unfamiliar cases in the same category. The article also discusses a range of other teaching strategies that can be used to complement this multi-disciplinary approach.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/55420/

Publicador

Middle Years of Schooling Association

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/55420/1/55420A.pdf

http://www.mysa.org.au/index.cfm?action=content&title=australian-journal-of-middle-schooling&id=254

Carter, Merilyn Gladys, Hipwell, Patricia, & Quinnell, Lorna (2012) A picture is worth a thousand words : an approach to learning about visuals. Australian Journal of Middle Schooling, 12(2), pp. 5-15.

Direitos

Copyright 2012 Middle Years of Schooling Association

Fonte

School of Curriculum; Faculty of Education

Palavras-Chave #130000 EDUCATION #Visuals #Visual literacy
Tipo

Journal Article