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Cultivating Visual Literacy in Early Years Education

Updated: Sep 14





Visual literacy is a crucial skill in the early years, laying a foundation for comprehension, creativity, and social development. Educators, as the key facilitators, play a pivotal role in this process, guiding children to interpret and create visual content. Their role enriches children's language skills, enhances critical thinking, and promotes expressive abilities. This article explores the educational value of visual literacy and the essential role of educators in this journey. It offers strategies to integrate it into early childhood education, drawing on the insights of Loris Malaguzzi, founder of the Reggio Emilia approach.


Educational Value of Visual Literacy

  1. Enhances Comprehension and Critical Thinking: Visual literacy is a powerful tool that encourages children to interpret images, significantly improving their comprehension skills. Children learn to think critically, make connections, and understand the relationship between images and accompanying text by examining and discussing visuals.



  2. Supports Language Development: Visual media plays a substantial role in enriching vocabulary and language skills. When children discuss what they see, they articulate their thoughts, enhancing their ability to communicate and express ideas effectively. Loris Malaguzzi, the visionary behind the Reggio Emilia approach, championed that children possess “a hundred languages” through which they express their thoughts and ideas. Drawing, painting, and other artistic forms are among these languages, providing children with the tools to clarify their thinking and expand their vocabulary.



  3. Encourages Creativity and Expression: Visual literacy provides children with alternative ways to express themselves, especially those who struggle with verbal communication. According to Malaguzzi, the arts are a powerful medium for children to convey their ideas, emotions, and understanding of the world. Children can use different visual languages to represent their thoughts in ways that words alone might not capture, leading to a deeper exploration of their ideas.



  4. Build Social Skills: Group activities centred around visual media offer opportunities for children to develop social skills. By sharing their interpretations and listening to others, children learn to collaborate, respect diverse perspectives, and build on each other’s ideas.

Below are two notable examples of young children integrating visual communication and language skills.


1.     Example One: Visio-Spatial Literacy.

The illustration is by a four-year-old child who attended a concert at her friend’s school. She identified herself in the shaded spot at the bottom of the drawing. Her friend was playing a guitar. The musicians are clearly on the stage and are drawn with great detail.

There is her friend, the guitarist and a drummer equipped with a complete drum kit. The circles below the musicians are members of a choir.  Notice the tiers in the auditorium. The artist is seated on one of the chairs at the back. The dashes are other people in the audience. In her back row, all the chairs are drawn more fully. The child has recreated an entire Visio-Spatial representation of what she saw. There is a strong connection between her drawing and her verbal description of all its elements.





 




 

1.     Example Two: This is the story of a Heart that talks


In Holly’s words:


My story is about a heart that can talk. It can say everything we say.  Her name is going to be ‘Heart’.It is going to talk to a dinosaur who is really sad because it’s lost its mother and father.  The heart takes the dinosaur to her home.Heart put the dinosaur in a pram and wheeled it home.  I’m going to draw with seven pencils.

The dinosaur finds some pencils that can talk. The pencils hear the dinosaur’s sad story and they write a letter.  The heart walks all the way back with the letter. She knows where the parents’ house is, so she goes there and gives the letter to the dinosaur mum.

The letter says:

‘Dear Mummy and Daddy Dinosaur, I can’t come back home because I’m living with Mrs Heart now.  She’s very kind. Come and get me in five weeks.

Love from Haley Dinosaur.’







This delightful story has a strong connection between the words and the pictures. Note the consistency across drawings of Mrs Heart's colours and features. I loved the use of specifics, such as the number of crayons and weeks before Dinosaur’s sojourn with Mrs Heart will end. Also, note that there is a difference between the story language and the literacy format of the letter. The child uses anthropomorphism when she gives the crayons the human ability to listen and write. There is no end to children’s creativity and understanding of visual literacy if they are given opportunities to practice it.


Strategies Educators Can Implement to Promote Visual Literacy

  1. Use Picture Books: Picture books are excellent tools for promoting visual literacy. They help children make inferences and understand narratives through images. Educators can select books with rich illustrations that encourage discussion and deeper understanding.



  2. Interactive Discussions: Encourage children to discuss images in books, posters, or other visual media. Ask open-ended questions such as, ‘What do you think is happening in this picture?’ or ‘How does this image make you feel?’ These discussions stimulate critical thinking and conversation, allowing children to explore different interpretations.



  3. Art Activities: Providing opportunities for children to create their visual art is a powerful way to foster visual literacy. Activities such as drawing, painting, or using digital tools to create images encourage children to think about how visual elements like colour, shape, and texture can convey meaning. According to Malaguzzi’s philosophy, these creative activities help children to ‘speak’ through visual languages, refining their ideas and expressing complex thoughts in a visual format.



  4. Visual Storytelling: Using wordless picture books or simple comics can help children create their own stories based on the images they see. This approach enhances narrative skills and encourages creativity as children interpret the visuals and develop unique stories. As Malaguzzi suggested, these visual narratives allow children to reveal their thoughts and feelings, often leading to new insights and understandings.



  5. Technology Integration: Educational apps and digital tools focusing on visual literacy offer interactive and engaging ways for children to develop their skills. These tools can include games and activities that teach children about visual elements and their meanings, making learning fun and effective.

Visual literacy is a dynamic and essential skill in early childhood education. Inspired by Loris Malaguzzi’s belief in the hundred languages of children, educators can use visual media as a powerful means of communication and exploration. Educators can help children develop critical thinking, enhance language development, and encourage creativity by integrating visual literacy strategies into everyday learning. These skills support academic success and equip children with the tools to navigate and understand the visual world around them. Through thoughtful, creative activities, educators can cultivate a generation of visually literate children ready to engage with and interpret the world meaningfully.



 


Lili-Ann Kriegler (B. A Hons, H. Dip. Ed, M.Ed.) is a Melbourne-based education consultant and award-winning Edu-Chameleon and Roots and Wings author. Lili-Ann owns Kriegler Education and writes to share the wisdom she has acquired through her training and 30 years of experience in education. She is a child, parent and family advocate who believes education is a transformative force for humanity.



 


To purchase Lili-Ann's book: 'Edu-Chameleon: 7 Dynamic Learning Zones to Enhance Children's Concept-Based Understanding'.















To purchase Lili-Ann's book for parents: 'Roots and Wings - A Parents' Guide to Learning and Communicating with Children to Forge a Family with Mettle'.









 




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