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Rothenberg, Julia Johnson; Cassant, Sandra – Educational Forum, 1996
Observation of two students from nondominant cultures demonstrated the role of social and visual learning in the classroom as children watched each other for direction. The need for appropriate visual cues and for structure was apparent. (SK)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Minority Groups, Multicultural Education, Observation
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Agosto, Denise E. – Children's Literature in Education, 1999
Provides a model for studying the relationship between text and illustration in picture storybooks that employ interdependent storytelling--readers must consider both text and illustration to comprehend the story. Discusses the role of interdependent storytelling in children's literary, artistic, and intellectual development. (NH)
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Models, Pictorial Stimuli, Picture Books
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Nelson, Nerissa – Education Libraries, 2004
This paper discusses the concept of visual literacy and its implications for librarians teaching information literacy components. The author concludes that, while visual teaching methods should be incorporated in library instruction, teaching visual literacy competencies is most effectively done in connection with discipline-specific content and…
Descriptors: Information Literacy, Teaching Methods, Visual Literacy, Criticism
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Frey, Nancy; Fisher, Douglas – English Journal, 2004
Alternative genres such as graphic novels, manga, and anime are employed to build on students' multiple literacies. It is observed that use of visual stories allowed students to discuss how the authors conveyed mood and tone through images.
Descriptors: Novels, Adolescent Literature, Visual Learning, Urban Schools
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Jacobs, Alissa; Shiffrar, Maggie – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2005
People frequently analyze the actions of other people for the purpose of action coordination. To understand whether such self-relative action perception differs from other-relative action perception, the authors had observers either compare their own walking speed with that of a point-light walker or compare the walking speeds of 2 point-light…
Descriptors: Motion, Physical Activities, Visual Learning, Visual Perception
Freed, Jeff – Understanding Our Gifted, 2006
In working with right-brained or visual spatial children for the past 20 years, the author has noticed that they all learn in a similar manner. He has also noticed that a high percentage of gifted children are visual spatial learners. The more visual spatial a child is, the higher the potential for school difficulties. Since most teachers are…
Descriptors: Gifted, Spatial Ability, Visual Stimuli, Teaching Methods
Paulston, Rolland G. – 1997
How might comparatists view and image the world as a visual dialogue? How have representations of visual culture in comparative education discourse changed since the 1960s? This paper identifies, types, and maps the scopic regimes of modernity (that is, the technical and critical rationalist, and the hermeneutical constructivist) and postmodernity…
Descriptors: Comparative Education, Critical Theory, Epistemology, Heuristics
Couch, Richard – 1993
Synectics is an approach to creative thinking that depends on understanding together that which is apparently different. Its main tool is analogy or metaphor. The approach, which is often used by groups, can help students develop creative responses to problem solving, to retain new information, to assist in generating writing, and to explore…
Descriptors: Analogy, Creative Thinking, Metaphors, Problem Solving
Fredette, Barbara – 1993
This paper examines issues in identifying visually gifted children, including artistic talent and its relationship to visual giftedness; the contexts in which visual giftedness represents a specific type of intelligence; the ability of classroom teachers to identify the visually gifted; resources that may help classroom teachers identify the…
Descriptors: Art, Artists, Children, Gifted
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Bernstein, Barbara E. – High School Journal, 1975
This article presented some of the research on learning processes and illustrated how different modes of thinking can be applied in teaching some topics in secondary mathematics. (Author/RK)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Individual Differences, Learning Processes, Problem Solving
Chipman, Susan F. – 1987
Visual knowledge is an enormously important part of our total knowledge. The psychological study of learning and knowledge has focused almost exclusively on verbal materials. Today, the advance of technology is making the use of visual communication increasingly feasible and popular. However, this enthusiasm involves the illusion that visual…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Comprehension, Technological Advancement, Visual Aids
Lorsbach, Thomas C.; Gray, Jeffrey W. – 1984
The current experiment compared the development of encoding preferences in learning disabled children and non-disabled children. Both learning disabled (LD) and non-learning disabled (non-LD) boys from grades 2 and 6 were given a false recognition task. To measure the relative dominance of attributes encoded by the two groups at the two ages,…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Processes, Elementary Education, Encoding (Psychology)
McIntyre, Thomas C. – 1982
Research on the role of visual memory and serial recall in dyslexia is reviewed. Findings touch on feature theory, which proposes that information is held in the form of "features," and that students for example learn to discriminate letters by marking certain identifiable aspects. Other studies are described which focus on speed of processing…
Descriptors: Dyslexia, Learning Processes, Literature Reviews, Memory
Cimbalo, Richard S.; Siska, Bonnie Lou – 1982
A study tested the theory that an item that stands out from its background is better remembered than one that is similar to the background (the isolation effect). Specifically, the study examined whether the isolation effect would be greater when there was a larger and more confusing mass of background items, whether position of the isolated item…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Higher Education, Learning Processes, Memory
Arnold, Thomas C.; Dwyer, Francis M. – 1982
In order to investigate the relative effectiveness of specific media attributes on student performance on criterion tests, a comparison was made of the effectiveness of two levels of stimulus explicitness in visuals in facilitating student achievement on criterion tests of knowledge, comprehension, and total understanding. Subjects were 171…
Descriptors: Cues, Instructional Materials, Media Research, Pictorial Stimuli
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