Tag: visual perception

  • Visualizing to Make Meaning

    By: Judy Zorfass, Tracy Gray, and PowerUp WHAT WORKS

     

    I grabbed my purse, stepped outside into the cold night air, and watched as a flake drifted to the ground. I started walking to my car, but I had to grab hold of a mailbox to keep from slipping.

    Did you picture a woman standing outside on a winter’s night watching the snow fall? Or maybe you pictured her taking a step and then slipping on the icy sidewalk as she headed to her car? If so, you were visualizing — a critical reading skill that is necessary to comprehend both informational texts and literature. Within the College and Career Readiness Standards for Reading, visualizing has a role to play in helping students identify key ideas and details and understand craft and structure.

    Proficient readers scan and interpret text, forming a mental image of what is happening. Visualizing while reading adds texture to a scene by adding imagined details that the text may not spell out, and it is an indication of successful text comprehension.

    By incorporating differentiated models, practicing visualization, and supporting your students as they visualize (drawing on principles for Universal Design for Learning), you can help them learn to use all of their senses to engage with and imagine the world of a text, and to bring that world to life as they read. See UDL Editions Visualize Strategy for a student-friendly explanation and rubric for visualizing.

    Technology Tools for Visualizing

    A range of tools (both low-tech and high-tech) can support your students’ ability to visualize. For example, you could encourage students to draw, use dramatizations, and/or create music. Students could use cameras to take photos, or they could search for photos, images, and other graphics. They could create their own videos or watch those produced by others; they could listen to music or use programs to create their own. A variety of software tools and apps are available that stimulate students’ visualizations and support their efforts to draw, diagram, and create images.

    If students are reading digital text, they can access a variety of embedded supports to enhance visualization (e.g., audio explanations, photos, and images), including embedded prompts that encourage students to stop and visualize. All of these tools can help you to differentiate instruction. The video below provides ideas for using supports that are built into text to differentiate instruction.

    Continue reading here: http://www.ldonline.org/article/Visualizing_to_Make_Meaning

  • New freebie: I spy … superheroes!

    New freebie: I spy … superheroes!

    New freebie: I spy ... superheroes, I spy, dyslexia, dyscalculia, AFS-method, perception, visual perception, spatial perception, worksheet, parents, children, homeschooling, freebie

    Here is another “I spy…” freebie. Children simply love them. This time it is about “I spy … superheroes”. Print them out, color, count and simply enjoy all the fun. At the same time, children train attention, visual perception and fine motor skills.

    Grab this freebie here: I spy … superheroes

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  • Dino – Perception Training

    Dino – Perception Training

     

    Dino – Perception Training –  is today’s freebie:

    Arrange dinos from small to big, find the dino that is exactly the same, and find pieces from a picture. These exercises train visual and spatial perception and attention – important skills for reading, writing, and calculating.

    DOWNLOAD (6 MB – file may take a while to load)

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  • Find the alien

    Find the alien

    Today’s freebie contains 3 worksheets.  Children have to find a given shape. They can color or circle the shape. These exercises train attention and visual perception – important skills for good reading, writing, and calculating.

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  • Robots – drawing and mirroring

    Robots – drawing and mirroring

    Robots, dyslexia, dyscalculia, parents, worksheet, perception, visual perception, spatial perception, attention

    Today’s freebie offers you various robots and a spacecraft. Children have to draw these into the grid, mirror them or make them smaller or bigger. Children are counting, comparing up and down and left and right. This trains attention, eye-hand-coordination and visual and spatial perception – important skills for reading, writing and calculating.

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  • Tracing and pattern

    Tracing and pattern

    Today’s freebie contains tracing and pattern exercises. Children can either trace the shapes or they can trace the shapes and complete the pattern. Let them use different pens and colors. You can also laminate the exercises. Children can do the tracing with a dry-erase pen. This is a good alternative for children who have difficulties with tracing. Knowing that they can erase their tracing seems helpful for them. Tracing and pattern exercises train attention and visual and spatial perception – important skills for reading, writing, and calculating.

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  • More picture chaos

    More picture chaos

    Monday’s freebie was quite a success on Pinterest, so we decided to offer some more picture chaos. This time, we used black-and-white graphics from Cre8tiveHands. Again, children have to order the mixed-up pictures. This trains attention and visual and spatial perception – important skills for reading, writing, and calculating.

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  • Picture chaos

    Picture chaos

    Over at openclipart.org, we have seen a nice penguin that has been waiting for an appearance in our worksheets for a while. The penguin, with all its disguises, is perfect for today’s freebie Picture chaos. The pictures are mixed up, and children have to put the numbers in the correct order. The penguins are also added as a template for those who have great difficulty with this kind of exercise. You can use the templates as memory cards. These exercises train attention and visual and spatial perception – important skills for reading, writing, and calculating.

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  • Easter: More Reading and Coloring

    Easter: More Reading and Coloring

    EasterReadingColoring

    Today’s freebie contains exercises for tracing, reading and coloring. Have fun!

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