| A picture Paints
A Thousand Words |
|
Pictures can be very valuable when teaching history. In the classroom
pictures are not just decorations, they are learning resources. Often students
can learn more about a topic from a picture than they can from a book. From this
page you can access a number of worksheets that will assist in focus students
learning experiences in analysing pictures. These worksheets are deigned to be
generic, so you can change the questions given as examples, to suit the pictures
you are using. The worksheets cover analysis, interpretation, concepts and comprehending the
information in pictures.
Pictures are valuable primary resources which can reveal information about
the people, places, and events of the past. Using pictures in the classroom is a
way to bring history to life pictorially. The following are questions which can
be used to dissect and analyse many pictures.
- What is happening in the picture?
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- What objects in the picture can you identify?
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- With which general time period are those objects associated?
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- What would be
the same or different if the picture were taken today?
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- What are
the people in the image doing?
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- What do the facial expressions or body language suggest?
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- Where do you think the picture was made?
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- What characteristics of
buildings or environment give you
clues to the location?
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- Why do you think this picture was made?
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- What do you think the artist was trying to tell you?
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- What are the
people wearing?
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- What
is the relationship between the people in the picture
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- What structures
are there in the picture? What are they used for?
Is there any thing in this picture
you cannot recognise? 
When using pictures as documentary evidence, it is important to remember that
pictures can be altered. Also, the picture may only represent a particular point
of view. When using pictures for research, don't draw conclusions from just one
print. Further sources must be utilised, such as historical records, other
photos, or books.
See Lesson using Picture Analysis: Peasants
Popes & Potentates
2
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Thankyou to Brian Hoepper @ QUT for these concepts.
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