2. Seeing comes before words.
The child looks and recognizes
long before she can read.
-
3. Reading images is a
near-primal skill
No matter what textual
reading level your students
may possess, they are likely
ALL advanced visual
learners; why not reach
EVERY student , EVERY
TIME, by way of using art and
visuals?
Baby “reads” a face
4. • Health warnings play an
important role in
informing consumers of
the risks they are
undertaking by using
tobacco products. …..but
to be effective, written
warnings must be in
large, clear text that
stands out from the rest
of the pack
design……..HOWEVER
6. 44% of smokers said the new warnings increased their motivation to quit smoking
58% of smokers think more about the health effects of smoking
21% of smokers who were tempted to have a cigarette decided not to because of the new
warnings
• The new warnings have motivated 27% of smokers to smoke less inside their home
Among both smokers and non-smokers, the two warnings identified as most effective at
discouraging smoking were (1) the warning depicting a diseased mouth and (2) the warning
depicting a lung tumour.
In many aspects, the warnings have had greater impact on those with
lower levels of education.
7. 1. Canada (2001)
2. Brazil (2002; 2004; 2009)
3. Singapore (2004; 2006)
4. Thailand (2005, 2007)
5. Venezuela (2005)
6. Jordan (2005)
7. Australia (2006
8. Uruguay (2006; 2008, 2009)
9. Panama (2006)
10. Belgium (2006)
11. Chile (2006, 2007, 2008)
12. Hong Kong (2007)
13. New Zealand (2008)
14. Romania (2008)
15. United Kingdom (2008)
16. Egypt (2008)
17. India (2008)
18. Brunei (2008)
19. Taiwan (2009)
20. Malaysia (2009)
21. Peru (2009)
22. Djibouti (2009)
23. Switzerland
11. • TEACHERS can tell the students about the art
…..and students become passive receivers of
information.
• Disinterest may result:
12. • Students can collaboratively “read” the art / image
and tell what they see.
• The teacher selects the image and facilitates
discussion.
• Results: LESS BORING and….engaged
students share differing points of view.
13. • 1. Give a minute to look
• 2. Ask: What’s going on here?
• 3. point, repeat, confirm, clarify
• 4. Ask: “What makes you say that?”
• 5. ASK: What more can we find?
15. CLICK HERE
For VTS in Action:
1. grade school Students
2. High School standard level
class
3. High School -- honors level
class
16. "The most effective experiences
for stimulating aesthetic
development give the learner
repeated opportunity to
construct meaning from
different points of view, take
place in an environment that
supports looking in new and
meaningful ways, and are
inspired by rich, varied, and
carefully chosen works of art.”
-Abigail Housen, from Art
Viewing and Aesthetic
Development
17. "The most effective experiences
for stimulating aesthetic
development give the learner
repeated opportunity to
construct meaning from
different points of view, take
place in an environment that
supports looking in new and
meaningful ways, and are
inspired by rich, varied, and
carefully chosen works of art.”
-Abigail Housen, from Art
Viewing and Aesthetic
Development
18. • So when does the
teacher share his or
her knowledge about
the history
surrounding the image
?
• THINGLINK is a
visual platform
• It is one way of
bridging the gap
between conducting a
guided discussion to
“teaching” historical
relevance.
28. • 3 Waves of
Technological Change
in the History of
humankind that
changed everything !
• What were they?
29. Toffler’s Third Wave
• 1st Wave
– 4000 B.C.
– What REVOLUTION ?
AGRICULTURAL
…
• Where??
• Four locations…..
• FLUVIAL..
• Nile River….Egypt
• Tigris and Euphrates
• Indus River – INDIA
• Yellow River – China • Getting food: video
30. 2nd Wave
What REVOLUTION ??
• 1800 A.D.
• INDUSTRIAL
– Machines….start to replace
MAN and ANIMAL muscle
powered endeavors …
33. • The art of memory is credited to the ancient
Greek poet Simonides, who was able to
perfectly recall the scene in a banquet hall
moments before the roof collapsed, simply by
reviewing it in his mind’s eye. The
“method of loci” assigns
distinctive images to anything
one wants to remember,
placing the images in
familiar rooms or buildings.
Recalling, then, becomes a matter of traveling
through those locations, or “memory palaces,”
and noting the images assembled there. This
seeming sleight of hand — memorize X in order
to remember Y — takes
advantage of a simple fact
of human cognition: we
naturally remember visual
images.Take a moment to imagine your
own living room; a detailed description of
everything in sight is effortless.
34.
35. • 1. Visual Literacy vs.
Textual
• Primal roots: babies
• Cigarette packages
• 2. Pedagogy and
Technology
• VTS
• Thinglink
• Daily Amelioration
• Screencast
• 4. Further Reading:
• Third Wave
• Always On
• Lighter, Faster, Cheaper
• Moonwalking with Einstein