Visual Thinkers: What Is Visual Thinking?

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What is Visual thinking?
Visual thinking has been described as seeing words as a series of pictures. It is common in approximately 60-65% of the general population. ‘Real picture thinkers’, those who use visual thinking to the exclusion of other kinds of thinking, make up the smaller percentage of the population: about less than 30%. Another 45% uses both visual/spatial and verbal thinking, and 25% thinks exclusively in words.
There is a way for visual thinkers to understand information better by making mind maps. Mind maps show the ideas, concepts and relationships between things (such as objects, actions or people/animals). These ideas and concepts are connected by lines and together they form a clear summary, but also diagramming and outlining
In their adult years, they could get problems with driving and reading maps, reading the emotions of others and keeping their life organized.
Many verbal thinkers take the chance to gain advantage from their good memories, pattern recognition, reasoning and eye for detail. (Drs. Fernette & Brock Eide, 2009)
However, where verbal thinkers excel is at reading and sequential learning tasks compared to visual thinkers. They have the upper hand at school, because they can quickly write down notes about what the teacher tells them.
Language is not a problem for these students as they learn through sound, which is how usually a language is spoken and taught. They remember spelling through how words sound, instead of where letters are placed, like visual thinkers do.
Acquiring and effectively using the analysis of key ideas, outlining and being able to recall repeated information makes it easier for a verbal thinker at school. They like using graphic cues, lines, boxes with text, arrows and highlighted images. Verbal thinkers would rather use verbal presentations such as lectures, tapes and non-illustrated
They get their information through different means and process it differently compared to non-visual thinkers. Through their manner of thinking they can decipher and solve things quickly.
The Dutch education system is verbal and mostly follows a set order for when and what students are taught. Visual thinkers process the information with all of their senses simultaneously: sound, sight, smell, touch and they also process it by a sense which monitors action. Only in this way, they are able to form an image. However, they still need to process and memorize this, which takes time.
So the method of teaching in primary schools is often focused on a verbal way of processing information, the teacher speaks and the child listens. However, visual thinkers prefer to see and do. That is where the teacher needs to get the best out of the visual thinkers in the classroom. With a computer or a tablet for example, a visual thinker can get started on learning materials that suit their learning

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