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Nonverbal Learning | 9 |
Pictorial Stimuli | 9 |
Visual Learning | 9 |
Audiovisual Aids | 5 |
Illustrations | 4 |
Visual Perception | 4 |
Visual Stimuli | 4 |
Cognitive Processes | 2 |
Instructional Materials | 2 |
Learning Modalities | 2 |
Student Developed Materials | 2 |
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Fillion, Bryant – Clearing House, 1973
Advocates value of visual literacy and recommends schools develop an image curriculum. Stressing perception, meaning and action. (DS)
Descriptors: Films, Human Development, Nonverbal Learning, Pictorial Stimuli
Wheelbarger, Johnny J. – 1970
Several theories in audiovisual education hold that learning from a visual illustration is directly related to the realism of the visual aid. In order to test this theory, five treatment groups were established. All groups were pretested, taught the same unit of instruction, and posttested. Four groups saw slide sequences in which were viewed…
Descriptors: Audiovisual Aids, Color, Doctoral Dissertations, Illustrations
Barley, Steven D. – 1969
Visual sequences should be the first visual literacy exercises for reasons that are physio-psychological, semantic, and curricular. In infancy, vision is undifferentiated and undetailed. The number of details a child sees increases with age. Therefore, a series of pictures, rather than one photograph which tells a whole story, is more appropriate…
Descriptors: Audiovisual Aids, Learning Modalities, Nonverbal Learning, Photographs

Dwyer, Francis M., Jr. – Harvard Educational Review, 1967
Reports on the effectiveness of visual illustrations used in conjunction with oral instructions. Results indicate that the reduction of realistic detail in an illustration does not necessarily reduce its instructional effectiveness and in many cases improves it. There were also significant differences in the effectiveness of different types of…
Descriptors: Audiovisual Aids, Illustrations, Learning, Nonverbal Learning
Ogunyemi, Olatunde A. – 1983
A study investigated the results of previous studies on the effectiveness of pictorial instruction, specifically examining whether the use of black-and-white pictorial instruction as a supplement to verbal instruction is more effective than the use of verbal instruction alone. Thirty-four studies on pictorial instruction that varied widely but…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education, Illustrations
Williams, Catharine M. – 1968
Well prepared, carefully chosen, two-dimensional visual aids are valuable in the learning process as a source of information and as a stimulator of student response. A student's visual perception and his degree of self-awareness can be evaluated by his reaction to pictures. At the instructional level, pictures can expand an experience, dramatize a…
Descriptors: Audiovisual Aids, Audiovisual Instruction, Illustrations, Instructional Materials
Ball, John, Ed.; Byrnes, Francis C., Ed. – 1960
Under the sponsorship of the National Project in Agricultural Communications, a series of 14 lessons by various authors has been compiled to serve as a reader or training manual in the field of visual communications. Several models of communications are outlined and evaluated. Many studies which concern themselves with the concepts of source,…
Descriptors: Audiovisual Aids, Audiovisual Communications, Communication Skills, Communication (Thought Transfer)
Greenfield, Patricia Marks; Alvarez, Maria Gabriela – 1978
Nonverbal context is important in the language acquisition process. The present study compares different amounts and ordering of pictorial context with respect to their effect on learning word-referent relations in a second language. Twenty-five monolingual English-speaking high school students were shown twenty Spanish sentences and pictures of…
Descriptors: Advance Organizers, Associative Learning, Cognitive Processes, Context Clues
Arnheim, Rudolf – 1971
Based on the more general principle that all thinking (including reasoning) is basically perceptual in nature, the author proposes that visual perception is not a passive recording of stimulus material but an active concern of the mind. He delineates the task of visually distinguishing changes in size, shape, and position and points out the…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Art, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes