Image Selection
Image Selection
The Critical
Thinking Consortium
Raghda Abulnour
Now provide the students with a text and no image. Allow the students to draw
what they can see from the text. If students cannot draw, and hence differentiating
instruction in accordance to different types of students, then allow them to list the
important parts of the text that can be visually presented in an image. After each student
draws an image or forms the list, take away the text and now provide the students with a
few images (either as a group or individually) and allow them to select the best one which
should be closest to their drawing or their listed points.
We can take this activity a step further. After they select the best image, let them
record it (so number the images maybe) and give them back the text. Allow them to
increase reliability by looking now at the text, their drawing or listed points, the image
they chose, and the other remaining images. So now they can see whether their selected
image is indeed the best or whether they changed their mind after relooking at the text.
This step allows students to improve in the decision-making phase when they decided
what to draw or list and so what they perceived as important information from the text to
be included in the best image. So this extra part increases student critical thinking and
gradually facilitates image selection (for example: which information in the text is
important and which can be filtered, what can be visually represented and what cannot).
So this step also depends on the type of students in class.
Raghda Abulnour
Thinking Strategies:
What thinking strategy(ies) will best assist students in processing the information they
have gathered (see connections, draw plausible conclusion, read between and beyond the
lines).
Inference and decision-making
Sorting and brainstorming.
Habits of Mind:
Identify 1-2 central habits of mind and explain how they will be explicitly addressed
through the critical challenge.