Thursday, 25 August 2016

Helping students with visual theraurus


 Picture this scene in a writing lesson at school: the experienced teacher has a small queue of fidgety eight year old children, waiting for her attention, as they had completed their story about a recent holiday trip. Each page had been beautiful drafted, featuring many of the key targets for each individual child’s progress. As the teacher went through the essays, one by one, she discovered a common problem – her class had no understanding of how to improve their work using a thesaurus. They had successfully removed the words ‘happy’ and ‘sad’ from their pages, just as she had instructed, and replaced them with substitutes such as depressed, suicidal and ecstatic, none of which made sense in the context. But, why should they? The children had no idea what these words mean!

Photo by jdurham at Morguefile.com

That night, being the conscientious soul that she was, she tossed and turned, trying to overcome this problem in a simple way which didn’t require her to have children constantly asking her for help in identifying better words. As she dreamt, the queue to her table grew longer and longer, snaking down the corridor all the way to the Head teacher’s office! The next morning, tired and cold, she stumbled to school, grabbed a coffee and sat down, sullen and alone in her classroom. She felt powerless to know how to act.

Just at that moment, a colleague from her year group came round the corner and, having seen her bedraggled condition, listened to her problem. She hurriedly left the room, before returning with slightly red cheeks and a multi-coloured book in her hands. It was the solution to her class needs – ‘The Visual Emotional Thesaurus’!



“Each book is like a mini-teacher that can be left in the middle of the children’s table. The book explains to the class through images and examples, how to improve their writing and broaden their emotional language effectively. It has banished ‘happy’, ‘sad’ and a multitude of repetitious vocabulary from their writing. Moreover, even children who used to struggle to grasp thesauri found the images enabled them to access the book too! I can come and teach the children how to use the book today, if you will allow me to, and I guarantee that your children will have a clearer understanding of how to enrich their description of characters by the end of the half hour.”

Photo by kakisky at Morguefile.com

Our class teacher nodded, pleased that the children would have a way forward, and that tonight, she would get a well deserved night’s sleep.

-Ian Long




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