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Visual Notetaking in the Classroom

By Wendi Pillars 鈥 September 24, 2013 4 min read
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Ever heard of the 鈥渁ffect heuristic鈥? Short version: How we feel is how we think. Positive feelings lead to higher motivation and willingness to try new things.

I鈥檝e never been a doodler but I sketch frequently in class to aid comprehension. The kids laugh at my silly drawings but also learn from them. I began to wonder: How could I build on that joy?

I decided to learn more about visual notetaking (also known as graphic visualization or ) and began practicing at home. Yes, practicing. Building my own 鈥渧isual library鈥 has been oh-so-helpful鈥攁 creative activity that keeps me thinking about the best ideas to represent in the curriculum.

During our plant unit, student-directed drawings of important concepts served as a helpful reference that we built upon each day. 鈥擶endi Pillars

Rewiring the Brain

Sure, I could sketch concepts in advance. It would be expedient鈥攁nd more polished.

But instead, I started drawing in class more frequently: sketchnoting while we were reading complex ideas and sequences out loud, while we were learning vocabulary. I even built these 鈥渧isual moments鈥 into bigger sketches in front of the kids. Near-instant synthesis! The kids were gloriously engaged and interested.

There was just one problem: I was learning more than my students.

Thinking in metaphors. Viewing content through a new lens. My retrieval and consolidation of information were improving, the connections easier to create. Here was neuroplasticity in its finest form鈥攎y brain was learning new skills quickly, rewiring neural connections as I changed my habits of thought.

Getting Started With Visual Notetaking

Visual notetaking was making me think differently. But shouldn鈥檛 my students be experiencing that cognitive stretch, too? Here鈥檚 my advice on how to scaffold this, helping students use quick sketches to synthesize and summarize:

A sketch in progress as my 3rd grade ELL students learned about North Carolina's native peoples. 鈥擶endi Pillars

While reading together, stop at predetermined places and briefly discuss how you could visualize that part of the story or passage. Yes, it鈥檚 merely a simple twist on 鈥渨hat just happened?"鈥攁 time to gauge comprehension. But it鈥檚 also an opportunity to incorporate discussion etiquette, build on others鈥 ideas, and draw conclusions (pun intended).

Begin with simple sketches kids 鈥渄irect.鈥 You draw, but elicit input from your students. Talk about the best way to encapsulate an event, a feeling, or other point of focus.

Let your students see you make mistakes or draw imperfectly. This gives them permission to do the same. Conjuring up visual metaphors is not easy; it requires us to tap deeper into our imaginations and link ideas together into larger patterns. Constructing the 鈥渂ig picture鈥 interactively, in the moment, is challenging.

It's always exciting to have a real author visit our school! Later, reviewing the event, visual notes sparked memories. 鈥擶endi Pillars

Some students will be ready to sketch independently, so offer opportunities to do so after the group discussion. A one-minute time limit discourages perfection while encouraging an immediate and reflexive response. It鈥檚 crucial to let students know that craft matters far less than concept here. Emphasize the essence of the sketch over artistic detail and, if you add an oral component, focus on the act of summarizing over perfect grammar.

Invite those who are struggling to copy your sketches. The act of copying may not be creative but it allows students the benefits of processing time and helps them gain confidence.

Advanced Practice

Limit drawing space. Depending on the number of stop-and-draw points I鈥檝e planned for a class, I sometimes ask students to fold their papers into four, six, or eight squares. The limited space is far less daunting than a full sheet of blank whiteness鈥攁nd keeps our lessons on track.

Ask students to explain. Extend and cement students鈥 learning by asking them to write brief sentences about their visual notetaking and to share out loud with a partner or the group.

Use graphic visualization as a strategy for mindful engagement. Reel students in for one-minute thinking rallies, as a scaffolding tool for muddling through tough ideas and as a transition or change of pace.

Learn from what they produce. My students surprised me, conjuring images as if they鈥檇 always done it. For many, visual assignments were their 鈥渨ay in鈥 to the content. Listening to their discussions of details demonstrated their critical-thinking skills were more advanced than I鈥檇 realized鈥攁nd I could better help them transfer these skills into writing and verbal communication.

Why Does This Work?

ELLs summarized major sections of The One and Only Ivan by Katherine Applegate in visuals and sentences. 鈥擶endi Pillars

What characteristics make visual notetaking such a powerful approach? The 鈥渁rmchair neuroscientist鈥 in me can explain the benefits:

  • Holism. It exercises students鈥 kinesthetic, auditory, linguistic, and verbal modalities.
  • Feedback. Visuals offer tangible, immediate insight that teachers can use to gauge and build upon comprehension.
  • Chemical changes. It can generate a much-needed dopamine surge for pleasure, oxytocin surge due to love and trust that undergirds success, and a decrease in cortisol associated with stress.
  • Connectivity. Ideas filtered through visual notes leap off the page and nourish the brain鈥檚 love for connections, imagery, and storytelling.
  • Fun. Big-picture comprehension. Deep thinking and imagining. Synthesizing information. Cerebral satisfaction. A 鈥渂rain break.鈥 A chance to revisit content. Listening. Laughing.

Visual notetaking wraps up all kinds of critical thinking, synthesizing, and problem-solving goodness! What are you waiting for? Start drawing!

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