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Barley, Steven D. | 5 |
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Barley, Steven D. – 1969
Behavioral objectives for visual literacy experiences are briefly delineated. The objectives concern skills related to: informative visual communication, persuasive and/or visual communication, general visual communication, visual concepts, and reading visual materials, as well as aesthetic and/or recreational skills. For example, the behavioral…
Descriptors: Behavioral Objectives, Communication Skills, Nonverbal Learning, Visual Learning
Barley, Steven D. – 1971
Many disciplines, including semantics, linguistics, philosophy, psychology, and the practical arts, have contributed to our knowledge of visual literacy. Insights these disciplines have made about the nature of meaning, art, or perception apply to visual literacy. If, as some studies indicate, some children are visually rather than verbally…
Descriptors: Films, Linguistics, Literacy, Photographic Equipment
Barley, Steven D. – 1969
Photography, films, and other visual materials offer a different approach to teaching reading. For example, photographs may be arranged in sequences analogous to the ways words form sentences and sentences for stories. If, as is possible, children respond first to pictures and later to words, training they receive in visual literacy may help them…
Descriptors: Audiovisual Aids, Developmental Reading, Photographs, Reading Instruction
Barley, Steven D. – 1970
Some student activities using still and motion pictures in class work are described. In elementary grades, pupils brought in family photographs to illustrate concepts like "family" and "friendship" and then wrote stories centering around the pictures for their classmates to read. They made movies illustrating concepts like "light." When students…
Descriptors: Animation, Audiovisual Aids, Film Production, Photographs
Barley, Steven D. – 1969
Visual sequences should be the first visual literacy exercises for reasons that are physio-psychological, semantic, and curricular. In infancy, vision is undifferentiated and undetailed. The number of details a child sees increases with age. Therefore, a series of pictures, rather than one photograph which tells a whole story, is more appropriate…
Descriptors: Audiovisual Aids, Learning Modalities, Nonverbal Learning, Photographs