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Visual Literacy As UDL Solution

Visual Literacy As UDL Solution. Part I. Definition of Visual Literacy. The ability to “ discriminate and interpret the visible actions, objects, symbols, natural or man-made, that he encounters in his environment.”

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Visual Literacy As UDL Solution

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  1. Visual Literacy As UDL Solution Part I.

  2. Definition of Visual Literacy • The ability to “discriminate and interpret the visible actions, objects, symbols, natural or man-made, that he encounters in his environment.” • The ability to “communicate with others through the creative use of these competencies.” Debes, J. (1969), International Visual Literacy Association (IVLA)

  3. Visual Literacy: • An alternative literacy • Images as texts • A source of primary source materials • Visual encoding and decoding • Critical examination of the world

  4. Why Visual Literacy?

  5. Why Visual Literacy? • Offers a different modality in learning • Provide a significant source of information and understanding • It is an important 21st century literacy skill • Students’ fascination with visuals

  6. Visual Images & Visual Texts • Photographs • Drawings • Maps • Cartoons • Portraits • Charts • Diagrams • Tables • Storyboard • Graphic organizers

  7. Meaning Making Visuals (Primary & Secondary Sources) Traditional Textbook Other Texts Other Media

  8. Examine this photo

  9. Type your answers to all questions[Use a different color] • What do you see in the photo? Write down everything that caught your eye. Lots of men. Most of them are white and all seem to be blue-collar workers- and very interested in what the black man in the center was saying. • When do you think this was taken? Where do you think this was? Around 1930, at a political rally • Write a caption for the photo. [Note: a caption is a short line of text used to explain a phot] Angry workers gather in protest

  10. What is the difficult part in the previous task? Type your answers below. • I am making a lot of guesses and assumptions without any facts

  11. Now, choose one caption that you think fits the image from below. Change your choice to blue color. • On a hot summer day in 1947, these spectators watch the final moments of a tense baseball game. Some fans are yelling in disapproval at the umpire because they don't like a call he made. • Entertainer Paul Robeson sings to laborers working at the racially integrated Moore Shipyards in Oakland, California, on September 21, 1942. • A mournful crowd gathers to watch the funeral procession of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. drive past.

  12. Type your answers in red. • What did you see in the picture that makes you say that? Men looking at one man in the center, knowing the way people dressed in that era, and the mood of the men in the picture • What are the visual clues you noticed that make you think that particular caption goes with that picture?Same as above

  13. Reflect and Answer • What have you learned about visual literacy from this simple task? That many clues and information can come from a picture- sometimes even better than words • Find out what type of a learner you are by finishing a VARK learning style questionnaire: http://www.vark-learn.com/english/page.asp?p=questionnaire • What is the result of your questionnaire?

  14. Visual Literacy Part II.

  15. Visual images as learning texts Visual images are incomplete, subjective witnesses. For example, photographs are open to varying interpretations from differing perspectives. These perspectives change depending upon: • the technological, aesthetic, and rhetorical components of the medium; and • the context of people (photographer, viewer, subject), technology, time, and place. Prof. Mark Newman, NLU

  16. The nature of the photographic medium Technology, aesthetics, rhetoric Visual images as learning texts Technology of cameras and film in the early 1900s: Black and white photos Rule of Thirds in composition: foreground, center, background

  17. The varying perspectives Photographer Visual images as learning texts “Provided the results are a faithful reproduction of what the photographer believes he sees, whatever takes place in the making of a picture is justified. In my opinion, therefore, it is logical to make things happen before the camera and when possible, to control the actions of the subject.” -- Arnold Rothstein, Farm Security Administration photographer “While photographs may not lie, liars may photograph.” --Lewis Hine, pioneer documentary photographer

  18. The varying perspectives Viewer Visual images as learning texts Most visual images, such as photographs, are familiar. We see them everyday. They are a part of our daily lives. The way we see things is affected by what we know or believe. . . . We only see what we look at. To look is an act of choice. --John Berger, Ways of Seeing

  19. Visual images as learning texts How can all students use this photograph to learn about European immigration to the United States in the early 1900s? What does this photo suggest about European immigrants entering the United States at Ellis island in the early 1900s.? What does the photo not tell us about European immigrants entering the United States at Ellis island in the early 1900s? Because photographs are incomplete and subjective texts, they seldom yield one right answer. They also raise more questions than they answer, meaning they can help students connect to other learning resources.

  20. Answer questions • Answer the three questions asked about the black & white photo in the previous slide (slide #19). Type your answers in red below: • 1.) they can learn who they were, how they dressed, and get a feel for the era • 2.) they don’t travel with much, they seem to be wearing their best, none of them seem to look particularly excited, and it seems to be mostly men. • 3.) Where they are from, where they are going, and their personal struggles

  21. Briefly summarize what you have learned from the part II—Visuals as image texts. Any new insights about using visuals, including visual primary sources to teach? • Visuals add an additional dimension to learning because as they say, a picture is worth 1000 words. It shows students an atmosphere and a depth words cannot always convey, and in order to engage students better, it is necessary to have some kind of pictorial representation

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