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The Basics of Effective Learning
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Visual Organizers
Examples of Visual Organizers

Visual organizers are simply drawings or formats used to represent information and to show relationships between ideas. Tables, charts, graphs, timelines, flowcharts, diagrams, and webs are all visual organizers.

The purpose of using visual organizers is to help you to think more critically and at higher levels of cognition than if you only focused on reading your text and taking notes in class. They help you to process the information at higher levels of comprehension, application, analysis, synthesis, and evaluation. By thinking about and organizing information in this way, you help yourself to better understand and to recall the information.

Example:

Time line

To summarize and show the major events that led up to the Revolutionary War, you might choose a time line.

timeline


The following table shows how some of the most common visual organizers can be used for different types of conceptual relationships.

Graphing Various Types of Conceptual Relationships

Graphic Type Relationships of ideas appropriate to this type graphic Examples:
Humanities Social Science Physical/Life Science
Web
(for a concept)
• Definitions
• Attributes
• Examples
Characteristics of cubism in art Attributes of the demand curve in economics Attributes of sun spots in astronomy
Tree
(for hierarchies)
• Classification
• Analysis
• Structure
• Attributes
• Examples
Family tree of the Tudor Monarchy in England Organization of the White House staff Classes of isotopes in chemistry
Chart
(for similar concepts)
• Compare
• Contrast
• Attributes
Comparison of imagery in poems by Anne Sexton Comparison of the Viet Nam war to the 1988 war in the Persian Gulf Comparison of planets of the solar system
Chain
(for changes over time)
• Process
• Sequence
• Cause/Effect
• Chronology
Plot sequence of a novel Stages of Piaget's theory of cognitive development Process of cell division
Sketch
(for visualizing a description)

Physical structures
Descriptions of places
Space relations
Concrete objects
Visual images
Description of the Elizabethan stage set in a drama Description of a complex appartatus for studying eye movements in reading The structure of the epidermis and dermis, the two layers of skin

From: "Learning across the curriculum with creative graphing", by Linda Lee Johnson, The Reading Teacher, International Reading Association, 1990.

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Developed by Meg Keeley
Special Populations Office, Bucks County Community College

With funding from the Carl D. Perkins Vocational and Applied Technology Education Act
Designed and Produced by Chimera Studio

Copyright 1997 Bucks County Community College. All rights reserved.

Author: keeleym@bucks.edu