The Role of the Internet in Visual Literacy
The Visual Teaching Alliance states:
- Approximately 65 percent of the population are visual learners.
- 90 percent of information that comes to the brain is visual.
- 40 percent of all nerve fibers connected to the brain are linked to the retina.
- Visual aids in the classroom improve learning by up to 400 percent.
Visuals, however, can be interpreted in many different ways. Students need strategies for interpreting images. A good teacher combines critical thinking and visual literacy. Some basic questions teachers should ask when showing an image are:
Who created this image?
What was their purpose for creating this image?
What emotions do you feel when you look at this image? Why?
It can also be helpful for the teacher to show multiple images for the same event. In preparing a recent Social Studies lesson on the Trail of Tears, I came across two very different images:
The internet increases exponentially the amount of static and moving images teachers can present to students. Students can find images to represent concepts they are learning. Videos can take students to places and times they will not be able to see. It can open up a wider, global perspective.
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