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Kundu, Mahima Ranjan – Educational Technology, 1976
Descriptors: Educational Television, Nonverbal Communication, Nonverbal Learning, Visual Learning
Berinstein, Paula – Searcher, 1997
Discusses the value and use of images as information. Topics include the information in images versus text; a taxonomy of image types; resources related to images; and the use of images in architecture, engineering, advertising, and competitive intelligence. (LRW)
Descriptors: Advertising, Architecture, Classification, Engineering
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Waits, Bert K.; Demana, Franklin – Mathematics Teacher, 1996
Discusses the importance of calculators in the teaching and learning of mathematics. Argues that affordable graphing calculators let all mathematics students use computer visualization on a regular basis for both in-class and out-of-class activities. (ASK)
Descriptors: Calculators, Mathematics Instruction, Secondary Education, Secondary School Mathematics
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Gross, Dana; And Others – Child Development, 1991
In two experiments, children and adults made judgments about drawings of a person walking or running. The drawings varied according to whether action lines, background lines, or no lines were present. Seven and nine year olds offered equivalent judgments of action and background lines, whereas adults distinguished between these devices. (BC)
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Children, Freehand Drawing
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Rico, Gabriele Lusser – Educational Horizons, 1993
Re-creation, the technique of redrawing a painting, rewriting a poem, etc., enables students to distill the essence of the original, developing both their critical understanding of it as well as their own creative expression. (SK)
Descriptors: Art, Children, Creative Expression, Metaphors
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Lemire, David – Journal of College Reading and Learning, 2001
Describes five approaches to learning styles that may be of interest to college teachers. Presents a short background to learning styles including some of the research that has been generated over the last couple of decades. Discusses the modalities approach, which refers to the three basic ways people learn: visually, auditorily, and haptically.…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Educational Research, Higher Education, Learning Modalities
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
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Gallagher, Victoria; Zagacki, Kenneth S. – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 2005
This essay demonstrates how visual works of art may operate rhetorically to articulate public knowledge, to illustrate the moral challenges facing citizens, and to shape commemorative practices, through an analysis of Norman Rockwell's civil rights paintings of the 1960s. By examining the rhetorical aspects of these paintings, including their form…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Art, Painting (Visual Arts), Values
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
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Blasingame, James, Jr.; Nilsen, Alleen Pace – English Journal, 2005
A lesson focusing on the names of muscles but relating them to more common words is presented, as current research suggests that the best way to teach vocabulary is to group related words. Students create visual representations of word groups and teach the words to the class.
Descriptors: Vocabulary Development, Teaching Methods, Visual Learning, Associative Learning
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
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Roberts, Martha Anne; Besner, Derek – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2005
Nine experiments show that in the context of Stroop dilution the extent to which flanking distractors are processed depends on the nature of the material at fixation. A Stroop effect is eliminated if a word or a nonword is colored and appears at fixation and the color word appears as a flanker. A Stroop effect is observed when the color carrier at…
Descriptors: Visual Learning, Visual Perception, Psychological Studies, Color
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
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Hodsoll, John P.; Humphreys, Glyn W. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2005
We investigated the effect of contextual cuing (M. M. Chun & Y. Jiang, 1998) within the preview paradigm (D. G. Watson & G. W. Humphreys, 1997). Contextual cuing was shown with a 10-item letter search but not with more crowded 20-item displays. However, contextual learning did occur in a preview procedure in which 10 preview items were followed by…
Descriptors: Cues, Context Effect, Prompting, Visual Learning
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
Seels, Barbara; Fredette, Barbara – 1993
This paper examines the role of myths and symbols in society through the use of a hypothetical dialogue. The paper begins by explaining what myths are and the functions they serve. Mythology and mythical symbols of past and present are compared. These changes in the nature of mythological symbols are explored through a dialogue between an artist…
Descriptors: Mass Media, Mythology, Oral Tradition, Symbols (Literary)
Meighan, Roland – Visual Education, 1975
A look at the use of visuals in the teaching of social studies in Great Britain. (HB)
Descriptors: Multimedia Instruction, Photography, Production Techniques, Social Studies
Goldstein, E. Bruce – AV Communication Review, 1975
A discussion of visual field, foveal and peripheral vision, eye fixations, recognition and recall of pictures, memory for meaning of pictures, and the relation between speed of presentation and memory. (Editor)
Descriptors: Learning Modalities, Perception, Visual Discrimination, Visual Learning
Levie, Howard; Levie, Diane – AV Communication Review, 1975
In two experiments, volunteer subjects were asked to look at words and pictures, with or without an interference task. The results are interpreted to support a theory of a separate but not totally independent pictorial memory system. (Editor)
Descriptors: Learning Processes, Learning Theories, Memory, Pictorial Stimuli
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