VISUAL LEARNING LEADS TODAY
September 19, 2016
Real education and training must be more than the organized teacher-led group environment we know today. It must be a process that fully accommodates the uniqueness of individuals.
And it will only achieve that goal when “intimidation,” a natural by-product of group instruction, has been erased.
Visual media-based instruction (video and graphic animations) is uniquely positioned to serve as that ultimate eraser.
When combined with optional word-for-word audio the combination is hard to beat.
Students are either self-motivated for learning and growth or they become victims of their own ignorance and disillusionment.
For a moment, let’s go back in time where it is easier to recollect that transfer of knowledge has always been learner-controlled.
Socrates discoursed with his many willing disciples, his silence as valuable as the spoken word. Socrates described his own role as that of facilitator, stimulating others to think and to criticize themselves, but not to instruct. Storytelling became the medium, and the arts of memory ruled daily life and learning. “Memory,” said Aeschylus, “is the mother of all wisdom.”
Later Saint Benedict and Charlemagne fostered and preserved libraries of manuscripts. These manuscript copies, laboriously transcribed in Latin, became the prescribed conduit of learning for the educated few.
Beginning in the 15th century, the printing press made information increasingly accessible in native languages, offering learning opportunity to more individuals. Literacy had become the key to acquiring new information, while memory skills, consequently, began their decline.
Today, we live in a visual age of information and too few would-be learners’ eyes rely primarily on the printed page for information and knowledge.
Information, values, and opinion are for the most part shaped by the two-dimensional images we see and hear on our tablets, smartphones and television screens. Reading for information has been de-emphasized in this natural evolution of knowledge transfer.
Today, moving-pictures of real people and real actions, making coherent sounds, are shaping the minds of our citizens.
And, so as trainers and educators we should look closely at the emerging media-based learning technologies.
E-Learning that is based on video and optional full audio communication; and, the rapidly developing gaming and simulation designs are capable of making a positive difference in the retention capabilities of our trainees and our students.
More on Wednesday – – –
— Bill Walton, co-Founder, ITC Learning
www.itclearning.com/blog/ (Mondays & Wednesdays)