Module 7
Module 7
LEARNING OUTCOMES
At the end of this module, you are expected to:
1. Define arts and creative literacy
2. Identify the seven habits of highly creative people
3. Explain eye-hand coordination and some associated disorders, interventions and
developments
4. Compare and contrast visual and verbal creativity
5. Cite ways on how to integrate arts and creative literacy in the curriculum
6. Draw relevant life lessons and significant values from a personal experience in
creating an artwork or presenting a performance critiqued by others
7. Analyze research abstract on creative literacy and its implications to teaching learning
process.
8. Create an art work and evaluate it using self-made assessment rubric
CONCEPTS
Teachers need to be creative by all means because teaching entails critical thinking
and creativity not only in presenting lessons but perhaps in all facets of instructional
endeavor. Therefore, students' creativity potential should be honed through various
pedagogic techniques, classroom activities and student engagement. Teachers have to
understand creative literacy deeply to guide them in assessing their own creativity and that of
their students.
meeting people with different ideas and perspectives; and (5) experimenting or constructing
interactive experiences and provoking responses to see what insights emerge
(https://www.creativityatwork.com/2014/02/17/what-is-creativity).
Developing literacies of the arts and creativity involves design of physical learning
environment, the emotional environment, scheduling, organization and implementation of
curriculum and instruction and attention to the body and the brain. Therefore, teachers
should be empowered in developing these literacies among students with the support of the
administrators, parents, and other stakeholders.
Eye-Hand Coordination
In most of our creative activities and endeavors, we integrate eye-hand coordination as
we inhibit our usual body functioning.
Eye—hand coordination (also known as hand—eye coordination) is the coordinated
control of eye movement with hand movement and the processing of visual input to guide
reaching and grasping along with the use of proprioception of hands to guide the eyes. Eye—
hand coordination can be observed in diverse activities, such as the movement of objects,
handwriting, catching a ball, sports, performance, music, reading, computer gaming, typing,
and others. In short, it becomes part of the mechanisms of performing everyday tasks.
Without it, people would be unable to carry out even the simplest actions in daily life.
Eye-hand coordination therefore, is the ability of the vision system to coordinate the
information received through the eyes to control, guide, and direct the hands in the
accomplishment of a given task. It is also a complex cognitive ability as it unites visual and
motor skills, allowing the hand to be guided by the visual stimulation that the eyes receive. It
is the ability to do activities that require simultaneous use of hands and eyes, like an activity
that uses the information that eyes perceive (visual spatial perception) to guide the hands in
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Visual Literacy
In the advent of the Internet, students must develop the necessary visual literacy
skills to navigate the image-intense world.
Therefore, visual literacy refers to interpreting and creating visual images and
usually about communication and interaction.
Visual literacy is the ability to read, write and create visual images. It is a concept
that relates to art and design and has much wider applications. It is about language,
communication and interaction. Visual media is a linguistic tool, with which we
communicate, exchange ideas and navigate our highly visual digital world.
The term was first coined in 1969 by John Debes, who was the founder of the
International Visual Literacy Association Debes explains: "Visual literacy refers to a group of
vision-competencies a human being can develop by seeing, having and integrating other
sensory experiences. "
According to Oxford Research Encyclopedia, visual literacy is the ability to interpret,
negotiate and make meaning from information presented in the form of an image, extending
the meaning of literacy, which commonly signifies interpretation of a written or printed text. It
is therefore, based on the idea that pictures can be read and the meaning can be through a
process of reading.
Serafini (2017) asserted that visual literacy is a set of visual competencies or cognitive
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skills and strategies one needs to make sense of visual images. These visual competencies
were seen as universal cognitive abilities that were used for understanding visual images
regardless of the contexts of production, reception, and dissemination. More contemporary
definitions stress that visual literacy is a contextualized, social practice as much as an
individualized, cognitively based set of competencies. It is also a process of generating
meanings in transaction with multimodal ensembles that include written text, visual images,
and design elements from a variety of perspectives to meet the requirements of particular
social contexts.
Theories of visual literacy can be integrated across disciplines. Therefore, visual
literacy now incorporates sociocultural, semiotic, critical, and multimodal perspectives to
understand the meaning that are potential of the visual and verbal ensembles encountered in
social environments (Serafini, 2017). Digital technology has greatly impacted our
understanding of visual literacy as we now see children growing up with tablets and
computers and what appears to be highly developed Visual literacy instincts.
Verbal Creativity
In view of the rapidly increasing complexity of the world, creativity is more important
now than ever before and is even considered as a useful and effective response to
evolutionary changes, since it allows the individual to flexibly respond to the continuously
changing conditions around (Runco, 2004 in Fink, et. al., 2015). Torrance (1969) in Hasan
(2017) recognized creativity as important for the development of a fully functioning, mentally
healthy, well-educated and vocationally successful individual. It is because of growing
recognition of the importance of creative functioning and there is sufficient evidence of the
universality of creativity.
Scott et. al (2004) cited that creativity-related skills can be improved by providing
specific rules, techniques or strategies to develop appropriate cognitive skills for the domain
at hand. This could be realized through creative ideation trainings or divergent thinking
exercises (Coskun, 2005; Benedek et. al, 2006), which aim at stimulating effective search,
retrieval, and integration/combination of remote associations related to a given stimulus
word. Divergent thinking is a useful concept for identifying, supporting and measuring
creativity as a process to actualize one's self, manipulate internal and external symbols as
creation of illustrative ideas based on his/her knowledge senses regarding people and
objects to produce on (Hasan, 2017).
The four major components of divergent thinking are fluency, flexibility, originality and
elaboration, which are very useful for an operational concept. Fluency refers to the total
number of ideas, options and solutions generated for an open-ended problem; flexibility is
the number of conceptual categories; originality is the aspect of created or invented works
and is about statistical infrequency of responses related to the task compared with original
ideas; and elaboration is the ability to expand on an idea with details and the ability to create
an intricate plan.
Fink et al (2012) explained that cognitive stimulation through common or moderately
creative ideas was effective in improving verbal creativity, and most importantly, stimulation
effects were also apparent at the level of the brain. As such, a widespread creativity-related
neural network includes left middle and superior temporal gyri along with right parietal cortex
being sensitive to cognitive stimulation.
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Excerpt from the book of De Leon, E.B. (2020). Building and Enhancing New Literacies
Across the Curriculum. pp 179-193. Lorimar Publishing.