Student Visual Communication of Evolution |
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Authors: | Alandeom W. Oliveira Kristin Cook |
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Affiliation: | 1.Educational Theory and Practice Department,State University of New York at Albany,Albany,USA;2.Annsley Frazier Thornton School of Education,Bellarmine University,Louisville,USA |
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Abstract: | Despite growing recognition of the importance of visual representations to science education, previous research has given attention mostly to verbal modalities of evolution instruction. Visual aspects of classroom learning of evolution are yet to be systematically examined by science educators. The present study attends to this issue by exploring the types of evolutionary imagery deployed by secondary students. Our visual design analysis revealed that students resorted to two larger categories of images when visually communicating evolution: spatial metaphors (images that provided a spatio-temporal account of human evolution as a metaphorical “walk” across time and space) and symbolic representations (“icons of evolution” such as personal portraits of Charles Darwin that simply evoked evolutionary theory rather than metaphorically conveying its conceptual contents). It is argued that students need opportunities to collaboratively critique evolutionary imagery and to extend their visual perception of evolution beyond dominant images. |
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