Why
is visual literacy important?
We live in an increasingly
visual culture. We are surrounded by images everywhere in our lives.
By looking at and studying photographs with your students, you will
help them better understand the complexities of their world.
Visual literacy
is defined as the ability to understand communications composed of visual
images as well as being able to use visual imagery to communicate to
others. Students become visually literate by the practice of visual
encoding (expressing their thoughts and ideas in visual form) and visual
decoding (translating and understanding the meaning of visual imagery).
It is important
that students learn to recognize and understand the often-complex messages
of photographic images. Consistent with this goal, this website provides
students with tools needed to critically examine their visual world.
By participating in Picture This activities, your
students will:
- learn to appreciate
and analyze photographs
- increase their
visual literacy.
- develop and improve
observational skills
- increase critical
thinking skills
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Photography and
history
"The
image survives the subject and becomes the remembered reality."
- John Szarkowski (Director of Photography Department, Museum
of Modern Art, New York, 1962 - 1991)
As is alluded to
in the quote above, photography is a powerful medium that greatly influences
our interpretation of past events and our understanding of history.
Most people become familiar with historical events through documentary
photography reproduced in newspapers and books. We often learn about
events after they occur and depend on photography to tell us stories
about the past.
Given that photography
influences how we think about history, we should all be aware that photographs
are not simply objective records of people, places, and events. Rather,
each photograph is a highly edited production, and is created by a person
who has unique opinions and views about the world. These viewpoints
influence the types of images the photographer creates. In turn, our
life experiences and personal opinions influence how we understand and
"read" photographs.
By participating
in the activities listed here, your students will gain a greater understanding
of the various ways photography functions and influences how we think
about history. Your students will explore and contemplate how a photographer's
own point of view comes into play in the images that he or she creates
and how we each interpret photographs differently, depending on our
own life experience.
Why teach with
primary source material such as photographs?
By utilizing primary
source material in your curriculum, you expose your students to artifacts
from the past that are authentic and make history come alive. Students
enjoy seeing objects from the period they are studying. The National
Archives states that primary sources "fascinate students because
they are real and they are personal: history is humanized through them."
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