Thursday, December 24, 2009

Engaging other ways of knowing

Learning style – Engaging the Learner

"I just wish I had a projector on my head and you had a screen on yours and then you would understand what I am trying to tell you” (9 year old)


This will be a some-what personal account, not a lot of dry research in the presentation but I will provide some links to resources and sources at the end.

So … as a visual educator since 1980 … but a visual learner all my life I have always felt something lacking in the way humans are processed through the ‘education system’ – something ignorant about the way ‘it’ assumes how we all learn – even today, 30 odd years after Gardner. I remember giving a talk to parents about visual learners in 1984 and in that 30-minute talk, endeavoring to build some awareness of what it is to understand holistically and to learn visually - relating the whole thing to visual language and how it is 'read'. You see, as a visual learner with an almost equal focus on the kinaesthetic, I find the very act of talking; speaking and explaining, difficult except when I’m in the classroom with students. [My parents always thought it was shyness, my teachers too (except the art teachers). I grew up at a time, not unlike the present, when girls were expected to be compliant but most of my friends were well schooled in passive resistantance. So, this became my story for most of my adolescent life, seemingly shy but doing what was 'right' for me despite that - understood by my Art teachers and the occasioinal English teacher].

… Back to the 30-min talk – that night, I was speaking about the essential nature of visual thinking/visual learning, the importance of seeing rather than simply looking, and how by engaging with seeing, all other forms of learning and therefore knowing the world can be enhanced.The interesting part of the evening was the number of parents who approached me after the event eager to share their Ah Ha experiences and some new found insights about their own learning styles. Some 'see' holistically, some understand sequentially and while 'schooling' respects and largely favours the latter, it seems that the former is coming into its own.

For those of you who know me, you know I have a penchant for seeking the subconscious roots of ideas, for the use of visualisation in the classroom, meditation and mindful awareness practices – not the sitting kind, the moving, active kind. Also, I have rather eclectic ‘grazing’ habits when it comes to ‘research’ - what I like to call an embodied holistic way of moving through information in search of meaning. Well, this all grew out of active reflection on this notion of visual thinking and why I seemed to learn differently to the way teachers expected me to learn and most of my then friends did. Needless to say, I loved Art, but I also loved English, Maths and Science because of the way my imagination was engaged by the content – but if I’d been tested in any of these using oral assessment instruments or external exams only, I’d probably have failed.

Somehow I was born on a cusp of education styles – the essential little person I was in those days, grew into a time that was open to new ways of doing/seeing/being. My few important teachers, the ones who ‘got me’ gave me confidence to be me and I had a strong sense of what was right for me. However, that didn’t mean that the school system was user friendly, and by all accounts, from many of our visual learners, nor is it today.

As Elliot Eisner (Professor of Education and Art at Stanford University) reminds us :

“We live at time that puts a premium on the measurement of outcomes, on the ability to predict them, and on the need to be absolutely clear about what we want to accomplish. To aspire for less is to court professional irresponsibility. We like our data hard and our methods stiff—we call it rigor.” Eisner, 2004

Sir Ken Robinson argues that it's because we've been educated to become good workers, rather than creative thinkers. Students with restless minds and bodies - far from being cultivated for their energy and curiosity - are ignored or even stigmatized, with terrible consequences. "We are educating people out of their creativity,"

Ken Robinson: http://www.sirkenrobinson.com/
http://www.abc.net.au/rn/lifematters/stories/2009/2741867.htm ABC RN 16/6/2009
Imagine it Art: http://www.imagineitproject.com/?p=887 http://www.imagineitproject.com/?p=864

Einstein ‘Imagination is more important than knowledge” Walter Isaacson’s The Mind of Einstein

In conclusion, I can’t do better than my guru of 30 years, Elliot Eisner. “To conceive of students as artists who do their art in science, in the arts, or the humanities, is, after all, both a daunting and a profound aspiration. It may be that by shifting the paradigm of education reform and teaching from one modeled after the clock-like character of the assembly line into one that is closer to the studio or innovative science laboratory might provide us with a vision that better suits the capacities and the futures of the students we teach. It is in this sense, I believe, that the field of education has much to learn from the arts about the practice of education. It is time to embrace a new model for improving our schools.” Eisner, E. 2002, Art and the Creation of Mind Yale University Press

http://sthathena.blogspot.com/2007/09/sharing-athena-assist.html

“Who are “visual-spatial learners?” Visual-spatial learners, or VSLs, are those among us with powerful gifts of the right hemisphere.” Taking Notes in Picture Form – A Powerful Strategy for Visual-Spatial Students Alexandra Shires Golon Director, Visual-Spatial Resource

US education has a new 5 year plan  i21 classrooms will follow the principles of Universal   Design for Learning (UDL), a concept that helps educators tailor their teaching approaches to address different learning styles.
According to the Center for Applied Special Technology, UDL calls for:
• Multiple means of representation to give learners various ways of acquiring information and knowledge;
• Multiple means of action and expression to give learners alternatives for demonstrating what they know; and
• Multiple means of engagement to tap into learners' interests, offer appropriate challenges, and increase motivation.
The technology systems that make up the i21 classroom provide for multiple means of representation, action and expression, and engagement, through the capability to add graphics, video, and sound.

"My son,Matt, was once a homeschooler taking an outside World History class
and one day, there was a guest teacher who had been in World War II. As the gentleman was giving his lecture (an oral presentation only, with no maps, pictures or other images), he stood over Matt and noticed that Matt was drawing (“doodling”) in his notebook. He held the notebook up for the entire class to see and said, “I hope the rest of you are paying more attention than this young man.” Matt was horrified that the teacher believed him to have been just “doodling.” After class, he approached the guest teacher and told him he was taking visual notes" from Taking Notes in Visual Form PDF


Sword, L. Visual Spatial Learners

Artscience – David Edwards – TED

Thursday, September 24, 2009

emotional intelligence


Why Emotional Intelligence Matters

Everyone has hunches ... But United States troops are now at the center of a large effort to understand how it is that in a life-or-death situation, some people’s brains can sense danger and act on it well before others’ do.
Experience matters, of course: if you have seen something before, you are more likely to anticipate it the next time. And yet, recent research suggests that something else is at work, too.
Small differences in how the brain processes images, how well it reads emotions and how it manages surges in stress hormones help explain why some people sense imminent danger before most others do.
“Not long ago people thought of emotions as old stuff, as just feelings — feelings that had little to do with rational decision making, or that got in the way of it,” said Dr. Antonio Damasio, director of the Brain and Creativity Institute at the University of Southern California. “Now that position has reversed. We understand emotions as practical action programs that work to solve a problem, often before we’re conscious of it ...
The ability to pick odd shapes masked in complex backgrounds — a “Where’s Waldo” type of skill that some call anomaly detection — also predicted performance on some of the roadside bomb simulations.
In a study that appeared last month, neuroscientists at Princeton University demonstrated just how sensitive this visual ability is — and how a gut feeling may arise before a person becomes conscious of what the brain has registered.
Some people’s brains were almost twice as fast at detecting the figures as others’. “It appears that the brain primes the whole visual system to be strongly sensitive to categories of visual input,” kinds of things to look for, said Marius V. Peelen, a neuroscientist at Princeton and a co-author of the study with Li Fei-Fei and Sabine Kastner. “And apparently some people’s visual system processes things much faster than others’."

 


Wednesday, September 2, 2009

Effective Affective

Notes from Rescuing the Affective: Teaching the Mind and the Heart 
" ... we simply cannot teach for enduring learning without honoring (and I would argue privileging) the affective in our classrooms" 
"while emotions are often highlighted and privileged in early childhood education research, they are treated in the secondary school research as troubling disturbances flooding into the classroom as a result of problems with families or peers (Hargreaves, 1998).

"The good news, however, is that there is a newly emerging rhetoric in terms of the significance of the affect in intellectual inquiry.  Some of this comes out of a spirituality movement that is sweeping across the country, as reflected in the writings of individuals like Parker Palmer (1998) and Sandi and Helen Astin (2004).   Some of the impetus comes from neuroanatomy, physics, neuropsychology, and developmental psychology as observed in the works of scientists such as Daniel Goleman (1995), Jon Kabat-Zinn (1990), Art Zajonc (2006), and Robert Kegan (1982).
 
" ... when one carefully examines the current trends virtually all of the major movements in higher education today have as their common denominator an emphasis on the affective in learning (i.e., service learning, experiential learning, ethics and values, leadership, and citizenship).

"Rather than restricting our understanding of learning to old paradigms, we are now talking about the integration of heart and mind, we are emphasizing the process of growth rather than the end product, and we are focusing on an ethical engagement with the profound issues of the disciplines.  We are asking such questions as, “What are the capacities we want our students to have and what are the capacities that they need so that they might contribute to a more sane and compassionate world?” “What do we want to integrate in our institutions?” “How might we teach dialogically?” “How might wisdom be incorporated as a pedagogical goal?” “How might we assist our students and ourselves in moving through life consciously rather than unconsciously?” How do we recover from the neglect of our interiority?”  This epistemological revolution, if we agree that such is occurring, is not the abandonment of scholarship in our institutions of higher learning but rather a grounding of this scholarship in a contemplative education and inquiry that provide a safe space for growth.  
 
" There is great solace in teaching to the heart,

"What seems significant is that emotional engagement must occur in the context of critical analyses rather than in a context of pure sentimentality. 

"Finally, if we as teachers are privileging the affective in our classrooms, we must know our own hearts and be willing to navigate our own inner landscape. "  
 
Patricia Owen-Smith, Professor of Psychology and Women’s Studies, Coordinator, CASTL Leadership Group on Cognitive-Affective Learning Oxford College of Emory University. Email: psypos@emory.edu Rescuing the Affective: Teaching the Mind and the Heart Journal of Cognitive Affective Learning, 4(2) (Spring 2008), 31-33. Copyright Ó 2008, Oxford College of Emory University. 1549-6953/08  https://www.jcal.emory.edu//viewarticle.php?id=128&layout=html

Saturday, August 29, 2009

knowing + revelation

Epistemic Companions: Art and the Sacred By Danielle Boutet
http://www.metanexus.net/magazine/tabid/68/id/10030/Default.aspx

The Artistic “Revelation”
 
For me, a lifetime of creative work has brought up the question of “artistic thinking,” i.e. art’s unique way of thinking and knowing. Informed by transdisciplinary studies and conversations, I have often posed the question in these terms: what does one know through art? Is there something, unknown through science or rational inquiry that can be known only through art? What does art contribute to knowledge, alongside other modes of knowing such as philosophy, psychology, theology, anthropology, or the natural sciences?
 

We are used to thinking of art as a form of expression, more than a way of knowing. Yet if artists do, indeed, express what they know about the world and about themselves in their work, it is most often the work—through the experience and the process of its making—that informs the artist about what it says. Many artists will agree that artistic creation is not so much a work of expression as a work of revelation. “What I do tells me what I am looking for,” says Soulages:5 meaning is revealed in the work, which the artist has indeed worked to “ex-press”—but not in the sense of “self-expression,” rather in the sense of “pressing out,” of “making appear” or “making emerge” from matter. The successful artwork surprises the artist, who is often the first to be taken by its meaning.
But how is this possible?



How can the artwork make visible (audible or perceptible) meanings or layers that its author does not necessarily see prior to making the work? And if what is made visible belongs to the world and to what connects the artist to it, what does this say about the world? What is this world that makes itself known through art?6 

Obviously, something of the world is revealed through creative practice and aesthetic contemplation. Paul Klee states, 

“Art does not reproduce the visible, rather it makes visible.”7 Art makes visible different dimensions or a revelation different from what science and philosophy, for instance, allow us to know.

I. Widening the Definition of Knowledge
Art in the Definition of Knowledge

 
To ask what is known through art requires a wider, more general definition of knowledge; one in which art would be an epistemology as essential and effective as science and advanced forms of philosophy. Yet in order to integrate art among the other fields of knowledge, we need to assume that knowledge could be at once scientific and non-scientific, sure and uncertain, objective and subjective.



READ ON ... http://www.metanexus.net/magazine/tabid/68/id/10030/Default.aspx 

Friday, August 28, 2009

HOLSITIC KNOWING ~ visual spatial intelligence



DO YOU THINK IN IMAGES?

Consider Dreaming ... http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/dreams/
 http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/dreams/ask.html 
"... dreaming also is looking for new ways to connect these associative networks ..." Stickgold
Whole thinking, Holistic meaning making ...
it may seem like a leap from dreaming into school, but there is a link.

Why do very intelligent students sometimes fail in school? Could it be that our educational system is geared toward those with stronger left brain hemispheres, leaving the big picture thinkers out of luck? Psychologist Linda Silverman describes for host Karen Saupe these and other claims found in her book Upside-Down Brilliance: the Visual-Spatial Learner 2002


Traditionally, schooling has focused on two dominant
learning styles – Linguistic and Logical/Mathematical.
However, research led by Gardner since the early
1980’s, has exposed the limits of this old paradigm.
Gardner’s theory has opened up for scrutiny the many
ways people engage with and learn from the world
around them that extends beyond this narrow
configuration.


Thinking in images is a powerful tool - 1/3 of the population thinks in images.
Images are whole messages, they contain meaning and they make meaning.
Most school subjects are geared to 'instruct' PART to WHOLE - a way of thinking about learning that negates the experiences of about 1/3 of students, according to Silverman.


Blooms Taxonomy tells us there is a heirachy - or sequence to learning, but this isn't necessarily so for visual spatial learners, at least not in the sense intended by his model. 'Sequential' can be interpreted quite differently and unrelated to the structure of delivery. 
This diagram from the Queensland Visual Art Senior Syllabus re Inquiry Learning Model is an excellent 'map' of the creative process:



Our world is increasingly visual spatial in orientation. Video games? hardware? software? And our ways for engaging in the process of education need to take this into consideration if they are to be relevant to the present - future.


Ask yourself; who reads/needs instructions? Consider the frustration of being forced through these hoops to get to something you understood at the beginning.


It's a fallacy that girls aren't visual spatial - my theory ... we all have the capacity span the spectrum of learning styles. In our current education system we must be cognisant of the fact that at least some girls will torture themselves to comply with logical/sequential delivery - they go through the motions. What happens if we imagine it the other way around? Creativity opens the process, Critical Thinking comes after NOT THE OTHER WAY AROUND?

 


Everyone is unique - the trick is in empowering the student to identify their own, most effective and motivating way of working/learning. 


BLOOMS Revised Taxonomy adds create to the top of the heirachy ...interesting

BLOOM'S REVISED TAXONOMY





WHOLE to PART
One approach to Inquiry Learning ~ Here's the problem ... Here's the tools Figure it out. See it in the minds eye ~ close eyes and picture what is being read 



VISUALISATION
Einstein saw in holes [: )] how do we see wholes? Identify your MI


 

Society is becoming more and more visual/spatial while schools, by-an-large, are not moving with it


Research = 2/3 of population prefer visual/spatial method of instruction
1/4 is auditory / instruction so they feel successful in school
Need some of both modes of instruction? Integrated way is best - using info from both hemispheres.


Everyone needs to have right hemisphere activated otherwise learning doesn't occur. Attention is in the right hemisphere


ART art ART that doing word ... CREATION is essential to activate right hemisphere
Anyone who has had intimate artistic experiences (e.g., as a creator, performer or teacher) would appreciate the special ways in which the processes of thinking, feeling, knowing and communicating take place in the arts (Eisner, 1996)

Artmaking contains within it, processes and gateways to opportunities for seeking and finding both purpose and meaning. 

"This paper (Wright, S. 1998) illustrated examples of children using integrated information processes that bring together thought, emotion and action; thinking through imagery (and sound) and with the body. Yet, synesthesia and the use of metaphor and symbolic expression often can be suppressed in institutionalised education. This is largely due to the social and cultural dominance of literal language and written modes of expression.

"... Consequently, much of the learning, thinking and feeling that occurs in the arts takes place non-verbally. This is because the arts involve unique forms of meaning making, knowing and communicating, through the use of discourses and a range of "texts" that can be "read" and "written".

"Consequently, a multi-modal approach to education should include a liberal definition of the term "Literacy", which encompasses the multiliteracy integration of body, mind and soul through musical, spatial, bodily-kinaesthetic and symbolic forms of artistic expression. Education should encompass a full range of expressive and communicative avenues ..."

Visual Language, and artmaking media provide access to the first layer of the journey, like an onion, they are part of a whole. The multitude of layers aside these tools involve all of Bloom's terms but they are not hierarchical.



SYNASETHESIA 
TOOL or METAPHOR 
 translating the world
smell ~ image
sound ~ movement
touch ~ smell
taste ~ sound


READING COLOURED WORDS
practice ...




"Stroop Effect" is named after J. Ridley Stroop who discovered this strange phenomenon in the 1930s. Here is your job: name the colors of the following words. Do NOT read the words...rather, say the color of the words. For example, if the word "BLUE" is printed in a red color, you should say "RED". Say the colors as fast as you can. It is not as easy as you might think!


interactive ...


try a directional one ... 


and numbers ... 




with animals?


Tapping into the student. WHAT DOES THE STUDENT DO REALLY WELL? BEGIN THERE and USE IT!


PROCESS + PRODUCT 
In the school curriculum, we need to focus not on one or the other at the exclusion of either.

In language, LEFT hemisphere is the only place that can differentiate phonemes in the auditory sequential - where they are put into little sequences ~ PHONETIC. RIGHT brain knows in wholes - reading whole words that are MEANINGFUL, in units of MEANING. Children can read fluently without any phonetic training.

An example FEELING to VISUAL - EMOTION EXTERNALISED
CREATE then ANALYSE






Providing opportunities for students to learn means that CRITICAL + CREATIVE processes need to be in place



Investigate the IMPORTANCE OF FLOW to activate Right Hemisphere and activate connections.
" The levels of reality are not found in the external world, which is obviously not divided into levels. It is the mind that, through adjusting its levels of perception (from the very close and small to the encompassing vision of a landscape or the immensity of the universe), through its language and thinking habits, makes connections between the elements that it distinguishes, and sees these connections as levels of organization. None of these levels of reality alone is reality itself: reality would be the infinitely complex whole of all the levels co-existing" Danielle Boutet



"The greater the complexity and demands of the outer world, the more essential are those capacities and qualities of interiority that allow us to be spacious and skilled enough to open the code of information : discernment, values, detachment, presence, imagination, reflection and heart." Hart, T (2007)

NOTES + RESOURCES

Are you visual spatial dominant?



A vision of education in the 21st century
"The beneficial aspects of visual-spatial reasoning will become more prized in this century as technology continues to advance. The main advantages of this way of knowing, as Steve Haas has summarized them, are:
  • Perceiving the whole quickly
  • Finding patterns easily
  • Thinking graphically
  • Understanding dimensionality









    Silverman, L.  A Special Excerpt from Upside-Down Brilliance: The Visual-Spatial Learner
    From Chapter 15, Visual-Spatial Adults and the Future of Education

    Right Hemisphere / Left Hemisphere ... well worth watching







http://www.infed.org/biblio/eisner_arts_and_the_practice_of_education.htm 
 An excellent article in summary

 Artistically rooted forms of intelligence
1. Experiencing qualitative relationships and making judgements
2. Flexible purposing
3. Form and content is most often inextricable
4. Not everything knowable can be articulated in propositional form
5. Looking to the medium
6. The aesthetic satisfactions that the work itself makes possible


Vygotsky, L  Russian Psychologist THOUGHT AND LANGUAGE http://listentogenius.com/recordings4/ThoughtLanguage.mp3

Jung, C. A General Description of Types
http://listentogenius.com/author.php/85 A selection from the essay http://listentogenius.com/recordings/General-Description-Types.mp3 

Piaget, J. A selection from THE LANGUAGE AND THOUGHT OF THE CHILD Download mp3 file: The Language and Thought of the Child



Multiple Intelligence Test - ONLINE

http://www.bgfl.org/bgfl/custom/resources_ftp/client_ftp/ks3/ict/multiple_int/questions/choose_lang.cfm 
 

Cognitive style and learning strategies  
http://www.monografias.com/trabajos16/learning-styles/learning-styles.shtml
Learning Styles + Strategies - http://www4.ncsu.edu/unity/lockers/users/f/felder/public/ILSdir/styles.htm
     identify your own from the descriptions

ACTIVE + REFLECTIVE
SENSING + INTUITIVE 

VISUAL + VERBAL
SEQUENTIAL + GLOBAL


Blooms Old + New



J. P. GUILFORD ~ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J._P._Guilford 


Eisner, E W. (1996). Qualitative research in music education: Past, present, perils, promise. Bulletin of the Council for Research in Music Education, 130 (Fall), 8-16 


Gardner, H. (1983). Frames of mind: The theory of multiple intelligences. NY: Basic Books.
http://www.infed.org/thinkers/gardner.htm



Hart, T, 2007. Reciprocal Revelation: Toward a Pedagogy of Interiority in Journal of Cognitive Affective Learning, 3(2) (Spring 2007), 1-10 Oxford College of Emory University

http://www.jcal.emory.edu/viewarticle.php?id=83&layout=html

Wright, S. (1998) Multi-Modality in a New Key: The Significance of the Arts in Research and EducationCentre for Applied Studies in Early Childhood, QUT
http://www.aare.edu.au/02pap/wri02327.htm


Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Monday, June 22, 2009

Saturday, March 21, 2009

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