Humans are complex organisms that possess well-balanced sensorimotor systems, with counterbalanced receptor and effector systems that enable them to sense psychomotor data and act on it using complex motor systems. Likewise, humans have reasonably keen aural perception, allowing them to hear a large range of sounds. Those sounds can be replicated or at least responded to orally by forcing air through the diaphragm, palette, and lips to create an infinite variety of sounds. However, our most…
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Added by Timothy Gangwer on November 3, 2009 at 9:57am —
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Does your child use his hands when he tells you about his day? Does he remember faces, but not names? Is he artistic? Well, all those crayon markings on your sparkling white walls could mean your little one is a visual learner.
There are three main types of learning styles: visual, auditory, and kinesthetic (or physical). Visual learners learn best by watching. Gloria Moskowitz-Sweet, licensed clinical social worker and coordinator of Parents Place Express, defines the visual learner…
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Added by Timothy Gangwer on November 2, 2009 at 10:23am —
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The Science of Learning Center on Visual Language and Visual Learning (VL2) at Gallaudet University brings together deaf and hearing researchers and educators from a variety of settings. The Center advances the science of learning by investigating how humans acquire and use language and develop literacy when audition is not an available mode for learning. Scientists from different disciplines explore collaboratively how deaf individuals learn to read and investigate how visually based learning…
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Added by Timothy Gangwer on October 29, 2009 at 10:35am —
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"The National Insitutes of Health (NIH) estimate that the incidence of learning disabilities in the general population is 15 to 20 percent. Fifty-one percent of all the students enrolled in the nation's special education programs are classified as learning disabled (U.S. Deptartment of Education)." Unfortunately, this diagnosis is often viewed as a hindrance rather than an opportunity for growth and understanding.
Parents and students, please note: Individuals diagnosed with learning…
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Added by Timothy Gangwer on October 28, 2009 at 2:29pm —
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If you're visually literate, you know what to look for in a photo, what questions to ask, and can begin to deduce its meaning and significance. Historical and cultural literacy will help you to refine and evaluate these deductions, as well as indulge in what the material culture scholar Jules Prown has called "cultural daydreams"--brainstorming about the larger meaning of the photo before diving into actual research on it.
Map reading, diagramming, making sense of charts and graphs…
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Added by Timothy Gangwer on October 27, 2009 at 2:31pm —
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LONDON, England (CNN) -- Film producer Peter Katz doesn't just want his horror movies to scare you. He wants to pinpoint how frightened you are down to an exact moment in a scene.
To do that, he recently teamed up with researchers and used MRI scans of brain function to determine the degree of fright caused by certain scenes from his latest horror flick, "Pop Skull."
For the experiment, researchers at functional MRI research facility Mindsign Neuromarketing, based in San…
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Added by Timothy Gangwer on October 26, 2009 at 11:02am —
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What is dyslexia?
In a 2000 Roper Poll, 63% of Americans confused dyslexia with mental retardation (qtd in Willemin, par. 3). So it is important that we define what dyslexia is.
Here are just a few of the host of terms that have been used for dyslexia over the decades: Association Deficit Pathology, Central Nervous System Disorder, Congenital Alexia, Dysgraphia, Dyscalculia, Dyslexia, Hyperactivity, Hyperkinetic Behavior Syndrome (an older term for ADHD),…
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Added by Timothy Gangwer on October 22, 2009 at 11:31pm —
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Visual images are fast becoming the most predominant form of communication. Children are surrounded by all sorts of visual media now and according to Mary Alice White, researcher at Columbia Teachers’ College:
‘Young people learn more than half of what they know from visual information, but few schools have an explicit curriculum to show students how to think critically about visual data.’
Visual literacy includes such areas as facial expressions, body language, drawing,…
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Added by Timothy Gangwer on October 21, 2009 at 12:42pm —
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Our brains are equipped with functions that are required for learning such as listening, reading (looking), speaking (listening), writing, calculating, reasoning, and thinking. They are organized so that each has its own particular neuronal network system which is operated by what we might call a program of the mind. We could say that learning happens when information received visually, aurally and otherwise through sensory organs switches on these programs, which then drives the neuronal…
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Added by Timothy Gangwer on October 19, 2009 at 12:19pm —
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Those who are visual learners understand concepts and ideas better when they are presented in pictures, text, drawings, graphs, charts or other visual representations. Here are some tips for making your coursework and schooling a little easier if you’re a visual learner.
Organization
Keeping your stuff together and staying on task can sometimes be a challenge. These tips can give visual learners a leg up on organization.
Color code. If you color code…
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Added by Timothy Gangwer on October 16, 2009 at 10:43am —
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They are not merely poems, but they are certainly poems.
The child of both poetry and the visual arts, visual poetry has a double set of interests and its forms are myriad. Some visual poets continue to write traditional poems that require a certain visual context in which to properly mean—a context so important that it serves as a critical component of a unified text. Other visual poets focus entirely on lettershape, drawing out the beauty of these pieces of language either in…
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Added by Timothy Gangwer on October 15, 2009 at 1:08am —
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Although the definition of literacy remains a hotly contested topic among educators and researchers, it is hard to deny that technology is driving the debate. While reading and writing will most likely remain at the heart of standard literacy education, educators should reconsider what it means to be literate in the technological age. The New London Group, a cohort of educators and researchers interested in examining the teaching of new literacies, explains literacy this way: "one could say…
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Added by Timothy Gangwer on October 14, 2009 at 12:03am —
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THE BIG QUESTION
How can we define learning and intelligence? This question has been asked countless times within the context of communication, brain research, educational psychology, pedagogy, and many other fields. Plato discussed similar themes millennia ago. Howard Gardner, a Harvard Psychologist who made a name for himself soon after graduating summa cum laude in 1965 is perhaps now the foremost name in Multiple Intelligences theory, and has addressed the question with a…
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Added by Timothy Gangwer on October 13, 2009 at 10:10am —
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Visual Intelligence: How We Create What We See. Donald D. Hoffman. 294 pp. W. W. Norton & Company, 1998.
Those of us not expert in the study of vision might assume the process of seeing to be complicated but straightforward. Wrong. Complicated, yes; straightforward, never. In this book on vision, Donald Hoffman lets the reader in on the "secrets" of what he calls our visual intelligence. He theorizes that what we see is constructed by the brain as it builds an image…
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Added by Timothy Gangwer on October 9, 2009 at 1:00pm —
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The Following Are Indicators Of A Visual Spatial Learning Style Coupled With An Auditory Sequential Processing Weakness.
This indicator is to be used for initial identification only. If the majority of these characteristics are present, it is probable that the child has a Visual Spatial Learning style coupled With an Auditory Sequential information processing weakness. However, this is not definitive and the child should then be referred for formal identification.
It… Continue
Added by Timothy Gangwer on October 8, 2009 at 10:15am —
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There exists many medical conditions, that, although they are incredibly significant, are not given the awareness and attention that they deserve. Although many of these such conditions can be pointed out, perhaps one of the most common and most often misunderstood is dyslexia. Dyslexia affects millions of people around the world, but despite these numbers, many often misunderstand dyslexia, and few give in the time and attention to finding out what the condition is, the symptoms that occur…
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Added by Timothy Gangwer on October 7, 2009 at 12:03pm —
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Images are all around us, and the ability to interpret them meaningfully is a vital skill for students to learn.
“LITERACY” USUALLY MEANS THE ABILITY TO READ AND WRITE, but it can also refer to the ability to “read” kinds of signs other than words — for example, images or gestures. The proliferation of images in our culture — in newspapers and magazines, in advertising, on television, and on the Web — makes visual literacy, the ability to “read” images, a vital skill. But what…
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Added by Timothy Gangwer on October 5, 2009 at 11:27am —
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Books
Upside-Down Brilliance: The Visual Spatial Learner by Linda Kreger Silverman, the pioneer of the Visual Spatial Learner concept. Published in 2002, this book provides vast amounts of information, checklists and strategies for Visual Spatial Learners.
Right Brained Children in a Left Brained World: Unlocking the Potential of Your ADD Child by Jeffrey Freed 1998 - Specific techniques for teaching visual spatial learners reading, writing, spelling and…
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Added by Timothy Gangwer on September 30, 2009 at 10:31am —
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Reposting Links and Resources originally posted on my blog at http://digigogy.blogspot.com
Digital Bloom's Visual
I was playing around today trying to create a visual representaion of a Digital version of the new Bloom's hierarchy. I'm either going to link the images in this illustration directly and publish on a wiki or I will come back here and provide all the links in a list format, separated by Bloom's level. If you're…
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Added by Michael Fisher on September 28, 2009 at 2:12pm —
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The Visual/Verbal Learning Style
You learn best when information is presented visually and in a written language format. In a classroom setting, you benefit from instructors who use the blackboard (or overhead projector) to list the essential points of a lecture, or who provide you with an outline to follow along with during lecture. You benefit from information obtained from textbooks and class notes. You tend to like to study by yourself in a quiet room. You often see…
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Added by Timothy Gangwer on September 28, 2009 at 11:11am —
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