Friday, September 21, 2012

Visual Literacy in our lives...



learntecnology.com/blooms-taxonomy-mashups.html

After reading Hattwig et al.s article, ACRL Visual Literacy Competency Standards For Higher Education , I was not sure if visual literacy was now clear to me or if I was a bit more confuse. To be honest, I have always considered myself visual in many ways. I am good at remembering faces, but sometimes I forget names. I am terrible at remembering songs, but if a see the lyrics its easier for me to learn them. When given an instruction on how to do something, if I see how it is done I can do exactly the same as if the instructions are written or said it is difficult for me to accomplish the task. But is this ability of mine considered being visual literate? Hattwig defines visual literacy as “a set of abilities that enables an individual to effectively find, interpret, evaluate, use, and create images and visual media”, and as I read this definition over and over again it makes me believe that I lack some skills. I know that maybe, as a kindergarten teacher, I try to find many images and visual aids that will help me support a topic I am teaching, but do I do this effectively??? I think not anymore. I believe sometimes, because we are use to having no time for things, we use what we first see and convinces our eye, instead of taking the time to see if the image we have will reproduce the idea we intend to teach.

A few years back, I remember watching a movie called “What the bleep do we know” released on 2004, and it mentions how there is a moment in our lives that we are so saturated with all the information (ads) we see on TV, billboards, flyers, newspapers, magazines and internet, that instead of having a personal point of view of things we have a manipulated opinion, the same as everyone else. This stuck to me all of this years because its true, I sometimes believe in things I see without taking my time to interpret the information or take the time to investigate its purpose.



I believe that almost every individual has been exposed to visual media, in many ways, and it is not how much we see but how it affects our lives, our learning, our behavior and our knowledge. Younger generations are exposed to this in a much greater way than my generation did 30 years ago but I do believe, that born into a digital era, I was definitely taught certain skills in interpreting visual media.

At the ECC, kindergarten teachers constantly expose children to visual media; posters everywhere, pictures and drawings, and now that some schools have integrated mobile devices, this opens a whole new world of possibilities. Our role as teachers is not to expose them to even more media but to teach them how to develop skills that will help them interpret the information, to use it correctly and also to be able to create their own. Lets not forget that visual literacy "is a collaborative endeavor, involving faculty, librarians, visual resources professionals, and learning technologies."





2 comments:

  1. Mariana,

    I appreciated your reflections here! Because a lot of this technology jargon and the programs and applications we are using are new to me, sometimes I feel a little overwhelmed with how much is new and it makes me wary of whether or not what I know is truly old and outdated! In short, it makes me reflect and wonder, "what the bleep do I know"? I enjoyed your video post, and it shed light on the importance of maintaining an internal and "real" self in a world where we can electronically be whomever we want to be and where some of our students actually think in status updates!
    Thank you for sharing the perspective that you too sometimes feel like there is a lot of newness arriving each day to teaching. I am glad that visual literacy truly is "a collaborative endeavor", and it is good that we've got a community of support online and at school as we endeavor to figure this all out. Thanks for posting!

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  2. I'm a visual learner like you are! For us, visual learners, it would be amazing to receive as much information as we can in a visual way. However, studies have proven that visuals also works in any kind of learner, even if they are auditory or read/write learners, so let's learn to be a visual literate to teach how to be one.
    Also, you are right about receiving all this visual information as it is without thinking if it is good, bad, real or not. And that’s what visualization is about, not just seeing but watching. How? with perspective, critique, imagination and intelligence. I fully agree with you that these skills can be developed since the early years, and they must as we are entering to a world that's moving so fast.

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