Title: Strategies that Work Visualising
1Strategies that WorkVisualising
Workshop 7
Debbie Draper, Julie Fullgrabe Sue Eden
2Visualisation overview
- Visualisation strategies for fiction and
non-fiction texts
3Has visualising been taken into the hands of the
media and away from imaginations?
4Were children better visualisers before visual
texts became so accessible?
5Mu dictionary
6Quadrant A Analyse
- When we visualise, we are in fact inferring, but
with mental images rather than words and
thoughts. (Harvey and Goudvis)
7Quadrant A Analyse
- Visualisation can
- Help me predict
- Clarify something in a text
- help see the characters
- help see the events, setting
- Go beyond seeing to smell, taste, hearing,
feeling - elicit emotional and physical reactions
- Help me to remember
8Quadrant A Analyse
- Visualisation is important in our lives,
- Helpful for athletes, actors, musicians and
teachers! - Useful for setting goals and achieving tasks
9Quadrant D Synthesise
- Visualising is like.
- Use the cards to make an analogy about visualising
10Visualising
Quadrant C Personalise meaning
- Listen to the excerpt and imagine the person in
the story
10
11Charlie and the Chocolate Factory images
11
12Quadrant C Personalise meaning
- Was it possible to develop your own images after
the many versions of this character? - And how important is it that students learn that
it is OK to have their own versions of a
character or setting?
13quadrant B-organise
- Fiction/Nonfiction can be used for visualising
- Think alouds
- Illustrating with drawing
- Illustrating with text description
- Focusing on all senses
- Using imagery
- Character descriptions
- Understanding that visualising is an individual
organise - Double entry diary
14A summary of the main uses for visualising,
available on website
15quadrant B-organise
Great starting point
Comprehension shouldnt be silent Michelle J
Kelley Nicki Clausen-Grace
website
16Draw a picture of your favourite part of the
story..
- Discuss whether this is a good way to monitor
visualisations of readers - What if drawing is challenging for learners?
17RIDER
- Read read a sentence, paragraph, paragraphs
- Imagine imagine the picture/draw the picture
- Describe describe what your picture looks like
- Evaluate evaluate/check your picture matches
the story - Read on continue reading
18- Try this activity with an excerpt from
Charlottes Web E.B White
19Sketch to stretch
- A technique that can be used while reading aloud
or used when a text has no visual images. - Take some words that have helped describe the
sketch to fully explain the visualisation
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22Sketch to Stretch
Sketch Stretch
Sketch Stretch
Sketch Stretch
Sketch Stretch
While you are reading, or just after you finish,
sketch what you are visualising, then, in the
stretch boxes, add to the sketches in words. You
might choose to add emotions, feelings,
descriptions or other information that adds to
your sketch. Kerry Gehling from AUSSIE Interactive
23Creating mental images that go beyond visualising
Remembering a past experience using all senses on
a concept map is a way of demonstrating
visualising or using a piece of text
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25Visualising all aspects of a character
26Before , during and after reading visualisations
27Double-entry diary
What I visualised
How does this visualisation help me understand
the text better?
28Use poetry to encourage visualisation of imagery
- The fog comes
- on little cat feet.
- It sits looking
- over harbour and city
- on silent haunches
- and then moves on.
- From the Fog by Carl SandburgÂ
29What kind of little cat feet did you visualise?
30The fog is compared to a cat
Skulking and silent but a presence all the same
The fog comes on little cat feet