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Moore, Jill; Fowler, Ellayne; Rigg, Celia – RaPAL Bulletin, 1999
Moore describes the use of photos to develop visual literacy in parents of children with special needs. Fowler and Rigg use the same ideas in a general adult education setting. (SK)
Descriptors: Adult Basic Education, Parents, Photographs, Special Needs Students
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Bromley, H. – Reading, 2001
Suggests that pictures offer equality of access to texts for all children, and provide an effective medium for promoting discussion and reflection. Finds that children are able to develop skills of metacognition through talking about a pictorial text--children as young as six are able to demonstrate their understandings of the reading process. (RS)
Descriptors: Discussion, Elementary Education, Metacognition, Reading Processes
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Abelman, Robert – Roeper Review, 2003
This investigation reinforces the conceptualization of television viewing as a learned activity by highlighting the interrelatedness of children's linguistic, cognitive, and perceptual skills for accurate comprehension of television's most basic narrative device--temporal sequencing. It also explores the impact of highly divergent skills and…
Descriptors: Visual Literacy, Television, Literacy, Information Processing
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Constandinidou-Semoglou, Ourania – European Early Childhood Education Research Journal, 2007
Much of the advertising content children see is adult-oriented. However, research has focused on commercials designed for child audiences. Also, whether advertising is commercially successful or not, it constitutes a "form of acculturation". However, research is mainly focused on perception of the commercial dimension of advertising, and…
Descriptors: Advertising, Early Childhood Education, Audiences, Foreign Countries
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Johnson, Larry – EDUCAUSE Review, 2006
A new concept of effective communication is evolving. This new form of communication, known as new media literacy, incorporates visual, aural, and textual elements as well as a sense of immediacy. New media literacy is closely associated with Net Generation learners and is commonplace among higher education institutions. Larry Johnson, CEO of the…
Descriptors: Media Literacy, Internet, Higher Education, Visual Literacy
Clements, Douglas H.; Sarama, Julie – Early Childhood Today, 2006
This article features the Agam program, developed by Yaacov Agam and education researchers, who worked with him to further develop and test the program that teaches visual literacy. Visual literacy is the study of shapes and how they combine to make everything from alphabetic letters to great art. Although the Agam program is long and involved,…
Descriptors: Young Children, Geometry, Visual Literacy, Geometric Concepts
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Unsworth, Len – English Teaching: Practice and Critique, 2006
The increasingly integrative use of images with language in many different types of texts in electronic and paper media has created an urgent need to go beyond logocentric accounts of literacy and literacy pedagogy. Correspondingly there is a need to augment the genre, grammar and discourse descriptions of verbal text as resources for literacy…
Descriptors: Literacy, Semiotics, Learning Modalities, Multimedia Instruction
Seels, Barbara; Fredette, Barbara – 1993
This paper examines the role of myths and symbols in society through the use of a hypothetical dialogue. The paper begins by explaining what myths are and the functions they serve. Mythology and mythical symbols of past and present are compared. These changes in the nature of mythological symbols are explored through a dialogue between an artist…
Descriptors: Mass Media, Mythology, Oral Tradition, Symbols (Literary)
Levinson, Paul – 1980
The unfounded and sometimes absurd attacks on television have tended to obscure many of the medium's obvious personal, social, and aesthetic benefits. It is easy to watch, and if its content does not always provide viewers with much to think about, television does not ask much of them either: they may eat, sleep, and unwind in front of it,…
Descriptors: Audiences, Mass Media Effects, Programing (Broadcast), Television
Berger, Arthur Asa – 1983
Semiotics addresses the question of how people derive meaning from a text, and meaning stems from considering phenomena as signs and from looking at the relationships among these signs. Thus, a semiological analysis of the television series "Cheers" reveals that the title suggests happiness, good spirits, and companionship. The show…
Descriptors: Nonverbal Communication, Programing (Broadcast), Semiotics, Speech Communication
Breslin, Diedre; Marino, Eileen – Elementary English, 1974
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Mass Media, Teacher Responsibility, Television
Wong, Martin R.; Barbatsis, Gretchen S. – 1978
A visual literacy project to explore how children who have had no experience or instruction in the use of television would use the technology as a communication medium is discussed. One second and one fourth grade class were chosen to prepare three videotape "letters" communicating to their counterparts in another school information about their…
Descriptors: Creativity, Elementary Education, Open Education, Production Techniques
Blachowicz, Camille L. Z. – 1973
This annotated bibliography lists sources which attempt to define the boundaries of visual literacy and the possible relationship between the development of visual skills and verbal skills, particularly with regard to reading. The contents are divided into four sections: (1) references on nonverbal communication; (2) general reading on visual…
Descriptors: Annotated Bibliographies, Media Research, Nonverbal Communication, Reading
Wilder, Larry; Norton, Richard W. – 1972
A total of 48 fifth-grade and 30 nursery-school subjects were administered picture pairs in a discrimination learning experiment. In addition to a control group, one group of subjects (pre-choice) was instructed to pronounce both items before choosing one, and another group (post-choice) was told to say both items after choosing one. The…
Descriptors: Grade 5, Learning, Nursery Schools, Pictorial Stimuli
Fransecky, Roger B. – 1972
Elementary school children of migrant farm workers were provided with cameras, film and guidance in their usage during a six-week program to find out if encouraging visual literacy would increase traditional language skills. Children in such experimental groups had better language facility and increased their reading ability more than children in…
Descriptors: Communication Skills, Migrant Children, Migrant Education, Photography
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