1 / 15

A Visual Thinking Strategies Approach to Picturing America

A Visual Thinking Strategies Approach to Picturing America. Raymond Veon rveon@atlanta.k12.ga.us Picturing America Institute High Museum of Art Lisa Hooten, Head of School Programs Emily Hermans, Coordinator of School Programs. Take a minute to look at this picture.

paley
Download Presentation

A Visual Thinking Strategies Approach to Picturing America

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A Visual Thinking Strategies Approach to Picturing America Raymond Veon rveon@atlanta.k12.ga.us Picturing America Institute High Museum of Art Lisa Hooten, Head of School Programs Emily Hermans, Coordinator of School Programs

  2. Take a minute to look at this picture. What is going on in this picture? What do you SEE that makes you say that? What more can we find. Paraphrase! Point! Link!

  3. Take a minute to look at this picture. What is going on in this picture? What do you SEE that makes you say that? What more can we find. Paraphrase! Point! Link!

  4. Visual Thinking Strategies • Take a minute to look at this picture. • What is going on in this picture? • What do you SEE that makes you say that? • What more can we find. • Paraphrase! Point! Link!

  5. Visual Thinking Strategies • Ten lessons per year (Two 15 minute VTS sessions=1 lesson) • Increases writing skills • Over three years, raises reading/LA and math scores (12% and 16%, Grades 3-5 in Miami-Dade County) • Create confidence in student’s ability to comprehend complexity and to speculate • Foster a desire to learn and take risks • Encourage students to value their own ideas while listening and building on the ideas of others

  6. Visual Thinking Strategies • In a typical VTS lesson, students: • Look carefully at works of art • Talk about what they observe • Back up their ideas with evidence • Listen to and consider the views of others • Discuss multiple interpretations

  7. Speculative thought is central to Science, but… • Students often learn not to speculate because their ideas are shot down before being fully considered • In the arts speculation is not only encouraged but nurtured • We let students guide and shape their own ideas, knowing that they will eventually select the most compelling ones as the artistic process unfolds • VTS provides a training ground to learn how to speculate in other subjects

  8. Visual Thinking Strategies • Proven to increase critical thinking skills required in over 70% of questions on state tests • Proven to work with all students, including disadvantaged youth • Builds cognition through art • Students apply the skills of observing carefully, thinking deeply, expressing themselves, and listening to others in other subjects.

  9. Visual Thinking Strategies • Thinking behaviors • Making complex observations • Drawing conclusions • Expressing and articulating ideas in discussion and writing • Considering a range of possibilities • Revising • Elaborating • Applying these behaviors to new situations without prompting

  10. Suggested PA Images

  11. Suggested PA Images

  12. www.igniteart.weebly.comrveon@atlanta.k12.ga.us

  13. Why Not These? Themes do not lend themselves to speculation; If identified, discussion will shut down

  14. Why Not These? Possible for older kids; Harder for younger Kids to speculate about The Civil Rights Story

More Related