Thursday, July 12, 2012

Visual Literacy and Internet in the Classroom

Visual literacy is such a great method that can enhance any classroom.  Students in today’s society are used to the visual images and animations provided by the television, video games, computers, etc.  Educators have to use the images to help reach all learners.  Students learned in multiply ways and visual images can reach even the verbal learners.   There are many various strategies that can help the students decode and encode images to their prior knowledge or experiences.  In addition, the students will retain and recall the information if they can visualize the images and it can be related to their own experience.   




There are six types of roles that visuals play which are realistic, analogical, organizational, relational, transformational, and interpretive.  In my personal classroom I use realistic, analogical, organizational, and interpretive images to teach my students.  The one that I truly enjoy is the realistic one because the students use it with my vocabulary lesson every week with the Frayer Model.  However, I will set a personal goal to try to incorporate all six types to reach all learners in my classroom.
The internet can be a very handy tool to help any classroom however the teacher has to have the evaluation process and instructional knowledge to have student learning.  The internet can be used as an instructional and network tool in the classroom and it promotes real world experiences and builds a sense of community in the classroom.    Furthermore, teachers need to create a learning environment that promotes internet as a tool that can inspire students to critical think, problem solve, analyze, and learn internet etiquettes.  It is imperative for teachers to promote all these skills and achieve students’ excellence to create 21st Century Learners that can be innovators and global competitors.   

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