Wednesday, November 4, 2015

Knowing Your Students: Visual Learning


If a child can't learn the way we teach, maybe we should teach the way they learn ~ Ignacio Estrada
(https://msdillard.files.wordpress.com/2013/01/see-eye-to-eye.jpg)

              As future professionals of the educational sphere, teachers perceive that students will respect their role as the ‘teacher’, while accommodating a curriculum that is required in the classroom. It is important to note that building and fostering positive relationships with your students brings about the best in discovering students as learners and unique individuals who seek the guidance of the educator. Specifically, teachers learn to understand the strengths, weaknesses, and interests that each student ultimately embodies and that in doing so, educators will have a sense of what areas need improvement and what areas of learning they strive the most in.  In my own perspective, teachers should definitely learn to build relationships with the students that are nurturing, in that way, students will know that someone is there to guide them. By taking the time to care about each student in the classroom, it decreases the negative impacts of them falling behind in their studies, or losing focus in what they are learning. The better we know the students and the more they know that we know them, the more invested they become in school and take the initiative.

We all know that teachers are quite busy individuals, dealing with not just one student in the class at the time but every student and trying to get through their lesson plans for the day, but they are still able to manage their time and effort to try to give every student the tools and every opportunity possible to master a subject.

Is it true to say that education seeks to foster this notion? Can teachers accommodate for every student’s profiles?

We can say that education is not embedded and built on one specific quality of learning, that there are many kinds of intelligences that each student embodies to meet their learning needs and styles. By getting to know your students on an individual level, it is a simple way that your students can feel validated and cared for, while taking more ownership in their learning.

 Learning about multiple intelligences is one way to get to know your students, coined by Howard Gardner (1983) who challenged the traditional understanding that intelligence is fixed and can only be measured through the student’s logical and linguistic abilities (Drake, Reid, & Kolohon, 2014). Overall, the mainstream definition of intelligence describes it as ‘‘A mental capacity that involves the ability to reason, plan, solve problems, think abstractly, comprehend complex ideas, learn quickly and learn from experience” (Blazhenkova & Kozhevnikov, 2014). For example, looking at visual intelligence is having an eye for detail, being able to visualize, and remember and recall images.  One way to describe this is when the teacher physically shows the students objects, considered a powerful method to teach, and can bring the interest of the subject alive. For example, showing a sphere using a ball or cylinder of a tube are more effective than telling the students what they look like or holding rocks in their hands expands their knowledge of how much can be studied about different types of rocks and the process of their formations.

Are you a visual learner?:  

(https://youtube/PJiMjSscgk4)

In my own experience, I can say that I often use visual learning , I like to have a visual representation of the information provided to me whether through a picture, a brainstorming web, a chart or a PowerPoint presentation, visual tools help me to comprehend the content better and I like to use different colours for text when writing notes. As a passionate individual for the fine arts, I can gain the ability to visualize the world accurately and to recreate my own understandings of visual experiences.

(http://www.whatismylearningstyle.com/images/visual-learner.jpg)
For example, we look at how teachers in Japan incorporate the Strategy Tree for English language learners that illustrates the Tree with its trunk, leaves, roots, water, and the sun. Linguistic knowledge and skills are represented through the leaves and the tree, while the roots, water, and the sun represent learning strategies that foster the growth of the trunk and leaves (Abe, Yoshimuta, & Hu, 2014). For many learners, the ultimate goal of second language learning is to develop the four language skills represented in the leaves that are based on linguistic knowledge, the trunk, and the other illustrations are the affective, cognitive, and sociocultural-interactive learning strategies (Abe et al., 2014). Interesting enough to see is that the size of the Tree represents the current level of the learner, and its shape varies depending on where the learner lies within their skills.

(http://sisaljournal.files.wordpress.com/2014/09/abe1.jpg)
In my future teaching, taking into consideration the dynamics of visual learning helps me to see how ideas are connected and how information can be grouped and organized in a creative way. With visual learning in mind, tools such as this tree diagram enable new concepts to be more thorough and easy to understand when they are linked to prior knowledge. I can argue that visual learning is not meant for every student and there are certainly other intelligences such as logical, intrapersonal, musical, bodily and naturalist that can be linked to each student’s way of learning. “If you are a visual learner then the whiteboard or chalkboard is your best tool and friend, you are artistic and love to draw and doodle on paper using different colours. You see things in a different light and perspective, and this style works for you!

In ending this blog, I like to say that as future teachers, we need to identify how our students learn, as we are the facilitators of their learning. We want our students to succeed and in doing so we need to create strong connections with them, and develop a learning environment where their needs and learning styles are recognized. I can say that students don’t just learn by hearing but they also learn by seeing, 


 So good luck in discovering your teaching journey…




References

Blazhenkova, O., & Kozhevnikov, M. (2009). The new object-spatial-verbal cognitive style model: Theory and 

             measurement. Applied Cognitive Psychology, 23, 638-663. doi: 10.1002/acp.1473

Drake, S. M., Reid, J. L., & Kolohon, W. (2014). Interweaving curriculum and classroom assessment: Engaging the 21st-

             century learner. Canada: Oxford University Press. 

Mayumi, A., Satomi, Y., & Davies, H. (2014). "Now maybe I feel like trying": Engaging learners using a visual tool. Studies 

             In Self-Access Learning Journal, 5, 277-293.



4 comments:

  1. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  2. Alyssa, once again I enjoyed reading your blog. When I read your blogs, I often reflect on how I can incorporate the things you discuss into my classroom in the future. For myself, I’ve never really been an artists and I can’t say that I am a visual learner. Because I am not inclined in these areas, I often wonder if I will be able to meet the needs of my students that are visual learners. Because it is important that I am able to meet the needs of all my students, I will try to incorporate some of the techniques that visual learners use when I write my notes, such as drawing, making diagrams or making charts.
    In your blogs, it is obvious that you have been taking the feedback that we have been providing you with into consideration. I looked back at your first blog, and compared it with this most recent one, and I noticed a lot of improvement. Your blogs have become very professional, well structured, and your personal reflections on the topic are continually improving. Good job.
    In moving forward, my main suggestion would be to simplify your blog a little bit. You really packed this blog with a lot of material and ideas. It seemed like you had at least three main ideas: intelligence, types of learning styles, and how to meet the needs of students. I would suggest sticking to one main idea and backing it up with a few solid points.
    In closing I will leave you with this question, because you are a visual learner do you think your lessons will naturally involve a lot of visuals? How will you cater to the needs of students that learn kinesthetically, or by hearing?

    Well done!

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  3. Hi Alyssa,

    I really enjoyed your blog on visual learning. I found it very easy to connect to, as I am a visual learner myself. You had a lot of great insights into how to aid in bringing along visual learners in the classroom.

    I can tell you are an art student by how well set up and aesthetically pleasing your blog has become. You seem to have a great touch in colouring the right words, changing the font for the right words, and overall just making your blog really appealing to the eye to read.

    It’s great to see how far your blog has come in only three attempts. Looking back through your last two blogs, I could tell that you have become more confident in blogging over these two and a half months. I hope you continue to update your blog throughout your education journey.

    To further question your thinking, being that you are a visual learner and see it as important in understanding concepts and idea, how might you face challenges when in a classroom made up of many or all auditory or oral learners? What adjustments might you have to make as an educator if this were true?

    I enjoyed the great reads,

    Taylor

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  4. Hey Alyssa,

    I really enjoyed your blog this week. This topic is extremely important when knowing how to teach a classroom effectively. Accommodating to all of my students learning styles is a challenge that I think about quite often when looking at my future career. I agree whole heartedly that in order for this to happen, teachers need to create relationships with their students. Get to know them.
    I personally am a visual learner and remember multiple times being in class and trying to understand what the teacher is saying and I just won't get it. Then once the teacher, at the end of the explanation, put up a visual, I immediately have an understanding of the topic.
    In all of your blogs you show a deep understanding through your use of outside sources and course material.
    For future blogs, I would encourage you to make them shorter and continue to and add more personal feel to your writings. I also suggest using quotes, they are a great visual and short, sweet, and to the point, which always helps the reader have a bit of an understanding about what you're going to talk about.

    Great Work Alyssa!

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