IV. Discussion |
Implications for Research |
The theory offered in this paper is a first step toward improving
the teaching of writing to visual thinkers-and perhaps to musical,
kinesthetic, personal, and interpersonal thinkers as well-to
use Gardner's (1985) categories. The concept in this paper directs
us to improve writing by first identifying the underlying thought
processes, rather than assuming verbal thought and working to
improve the mechanics of grammar and syntax.
Studies of the interrelation among different modes of thought
-- what Stacks and Andersen (1989) called "intra­p;personal
communication" -- may also provide valuable resources for
writing improvement, especially if this helps maintain the integrity
of nonverbal experience in the face of literacy's power. |
Varieties of Writing |
The "writing" considered
in this paper refers to the kind most college teachers would
consider desirable (Olson, 1977a): writing to prove that you
have learned. But perhaps such highly organized, logically-sequenced,
fully-explicit expository prose should be looked upon as an unusual
and highly specialized form of human expression. Certainly, stories
are more universal than research papers, and disorganized, illogical
writing is more common than logical, organized writing. Illustrated
writing may be more "natural" than writing in words
alone. Perhaps visual thinkers need to learn not to "write" (in Olson's sense of "text" -- logical, fully-elaborated, expository sequences made exclusively of words), but to "communicate" through mixed media. The dominant concept of writing -- based on the typographically traditional book format -- has been severely challenged by easy interplay between graphics and text that can be found in any well-designed magazine. Fortunately, typography has recently been rescued from the near-invisibility imposed on it by the typewriter. In page-layout software, text can be divided into segments that can be typographically differentiated and arranged into sidebars, boxes, tables, pull-quotes, and the like, creating what Bolter called "topographical" prose that is at once verbal and visual. The user of hypertext can go even further and organize prose in a multidimensional non-linear structure (for good discussions, see Tuman, 1992, and Bolter, 1991). (Hello, we are in a form of hypertext now!) Perhaps writing has been made unnecessarily difficult by the rarely challenged assumption that students should write in a one-dimensional sequence and produce a document composed exclusively of words typed in a uniform typeface. Visual thinkers might learn to write better if they abandoned the words-only typewriter format and composed their thoughts directly onto page-layout programs in which the visual presentation of the material is, from the beginning, an essential part of its meaning. Note 12 Visual thinkers may be best at communicating complex ideas in forms where words are used to refine and label images, rather than images used to decorate pages of text. On the other hand (those "other hands" give this topic a spider-like fascination) Cartoon 1 (gif file, 15K) so many aspects of good writing seem to arise when words are forced to substitute for all other forms of communication (such as gesture, tone of voice, and pictures) that, to develop the right mental muscles, good writers may have to wrestle naked with the naked word. The strength of this engagement could be diluted, not helped, by graphics and layout. Learning to write better might even be influenced (as Halio, 1990, suggested) by whether one uses a computer with a graphic interface (such as a Macintosh or Windows) or a computer with a verbal interface (such as MSDOS). (1996 note: Does anyone still use a non-graphic interface? Are we on the verge of point-and-click writing?) |
Verbal Thought Reconsidered |
It is common these days to read
that verbal thought is linear, sequential, slow, located in the
left hemisphere, and fundamentally incompatible with spatial
thought. Note 13 There
are other possibilities. The increasing use of subliminal audio tapes suggests that the mind may have the ability to think in complete syntactical units at enormous rates of speed, and in several channels simultaneously. One recent experiment suggests that the mind may be able to think a burst of a thousand words as rapidly as it can produce a picture: Korba (1986) estimated that people can think at the equivalent of 4,000 words per minute. It is my hunch that people engage in high-speed, multi-channeled fully-verbalized thinking, as well as simultaneous "multitasking" in cryptic forms of verbal thought, nonverbal modalities, and integrated forms of thought. Such a concept challenges current ideas about the limitations of "linear" thought and could revolutionize our idea of where writing starts. Current models tend to set visual and verbal thinking against one another, but there may well be a mode in which visual and verbal thinking are deeply intertwined. Such a concept could revive interest in ideas that rarely appear in current research agendas -- such as intuition and the creative unconscious. |
Limitations of the Study |
There are problems with terminology
in this field--and in this paper. More tentatively than it may
sound, I have advanced the idea that visual thinking causes certain
kinds of writing problems. But the three problems I have discussed--lack
of words, problems of sequencing, and difficulty communicating
context--may be separable mental conditions that are not necessarily
linked to visual thinking. Furthermore, many visual thinkers
clearly do not have these problems; and people may have these
writing problems without being visual thinkers. Note
14 I have used the term "visual thinking" to stand for something that has yet to be defined with care, making a broad sketch of a field in which few details are clear. It is almost certain that the kind of mental states I attribute to visual thinking occur in other kinds of thinking as well, and those may contribute to writing problems in a manner similar to what I have argued for here. The literature on mysticism, for instance, describes unitary states that are wordless, imageless, utterly holistic, and so contextless as to be given names like "cosmic consciousness." Joel Goldsmith (1959) describes such a state this way: "All that exists in this universe is God 'is-ing'--Is, Is, Is" (185-6) (Note the verb!) Words, analysis, labels, sequence, syntax, context, connectives, and images all vanish to make room for a state of consciousness that is valuable for certain purposes (Goldsmith is a spiritual healer) Note 15 but cannot be written, spoken, or even visualized. Further knowledge about such states may, by contrast, help identify the actual states of mind at work when visual thinkers have writing problems. Note 16 |