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Robert Bullard Press Clipping
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Making the most of mind maps
Mind Maps ‘are the Swiss army knife of the brain', once wrote Tony Buzan,
their creator and promoter. But having cut into the education sector
10-15 years ago, the diagrams that once enthused us all have today
diverged into different, disputing devotees.
For those that are too young to remember, the maps were popularised in
the early 1970s, and were developed out of Buzan’s own experiences of
trying to memorise things as a child and university student. For him,
the traditional way of recording ideas in linear note form did not match
the way the brain worked, whereas his proposed more dynamic method of
mind mapping - that you might also know as spider or bubble diagrams -
mirrored and took advantage of the brain’s thinking processes.
‘The young child’s brain is a natural mind-mapper,’ says the typical
literature. ‘Using them makes the teaching more enjoyable and effective,
and the learning more successful and fun. It’s an educational win-win.’
However, thirty years on from the original Mind Maps (a term copyrighted
by Buzan) varying techniques have emerged. But as well as their
differences they also share common characteristics: the main topic is
summarised by a word or phrase (or an image, for as the saying goes, ‘a
picture conveys one thousand words’), related themes and sub-themes
radiate out from this, and together they form a connected overall
structure.
The advantages of such visual learning techniques, whatever their
precise approach, are obvious: (i) they allow a large number of ideas to
be presented on a single page; (ii) they offer a lot of flexibility,
allowing links between items and new ideas to be easily added; (iii)
their visual format is easier to memorise and recall than when using
linear lists; and (iv) they give an insight into other people’s way of
thinking, which allows different perspectives to be appreciated.
Several buzz words immediately come to mind. The techniques are
inclusive and encourage diversity, by allowing the development of
different ideas, creative in the way that solutions are developed, and
practical, by giving people ownership of their ideas.
And they can be used in a whole range of situations (well beyond
education): in learning and note-taking – allowing issues to be easily
assimilated by the brain; memorising – ideas can be quickly noted and
structured in an organised manner which are then easier to recall;
creative thinking – ideas flow more freely than under linear thinking;
problem-solving – you can see all the issues, how they relate to one
another, and different people’s viewpoints; and planning – allowing the
organisation of information in one place.
But the similarities between today’s techniques end the moment you pick
up your paper, pencil or pen.
To help you get started Tony Buzan has ten laws on ‘How to Mind Map’,
covering details such as how many colours to use (three), where to place
the words (on a line of the same length), and what the lines should look
like (thick, organic and flowing at the centre, and thinner as they
radiate outwards). Precise and prescriptive you might well feel, but
distilled from years of experience - as Caroline Shott, Director of
Buzan Plus, is quick to remind me.
Model Learning
But Oliver Caviglioli, a Director of Model Learning, says has no time
for what he calls the ‘strident laws’ and ‘aesthetic hang-up’ of Buzan’s
Mind Maps – even though he admits he was once an enthusiastic fan.
And his criticism goes deeper. For Caviglioli, the display of key words
connected by branches, albeit decorated by colour and images, is merely
a form of brainstorming, but no more. Crucially for Caviglioli, it does
not develop someone’s thinking.
Furthermore, he continues, far from Mind Maps being, as they might seem,
simple and easy to do, it assumes that people can do the necessary
categorisation for identifying the map’s branches and sub-branches.
Caviglioli believes, from his own experience, that many of us do not
understand the theory of Mind Maps, or how to do them, and sometimes
therefore use the wrong visual tools – and of which the maps are anyway
only one.
In defence of his views he points to the experiences of Oban High
School, Argyl, where Linda Kirkwood, Rector and Geography Teacher, says
some staff struggled with Mind Maps, feeling that they suited the ‘more
arty’ teachers, and classifying the information presented additional
problems for some pupils.
Caviglioli’s approach however, albeit taking more time, was found to be
more structured and easier to implement in the classroom. In it he
teaches people the four main types of thinking (conceptual, comparative,
ordinal and causal) and then their corresponding sets of visual tools.
“The most successful learners,” he says, ”are those that are highly
efficient at organising their thoughts.” And that means knowing the
correct visual tool to use.
Logovisual Thinking
A third approach, and relative newcomer to mind mapping, is Logovisual
Thinking (LVT), whose distinctive hexagons were first introduced to
schools in 2000. Today they are most commonly used with Key Stage 3,
but, as per the other techniques, are also now spreading to primary
schools.
“You don’t need expensive bits of plastic,” dismisses Oliver Caviglioli,
“and using a hexagon limits the number of connections that can be made.”
Which may be pedantically true, but ignores the tools’ evident
popularity.
“The results have been amazing,” confirms Dan Lyndon, a new staffroom
convert at the Henry Compton School, in Hammersmith & Fulham. The Head
of History – not a conventional subject for mind mapping – used the
technique when inviting children to transport themselves to 1649, and
decide how they would run Cromwell’s new Commonwealth.
“The kids loved the hexagons and moving them around,” he says, “Being
able to visualise, link and spell out their thoughts resulted in them
being more engaged, and greater clarity in their thinking.”
So, while Buzan stresses the scope for unleashing children’s creative
potential, and Caviglioli the prior need to re-learn how we categorise
things, LVT emphasises the creative process that result from
participants having to listen and learn from one another, as they
physically share and re-order their ideas.
One of LVT’s proponents, Dan Varney, Head of the Education Unit at the
Centre for Management Creativity, resists being drawn into comparisons
between today’s techniques, preferring instead a more altruistic
concluding comment. “Anything that helps student engage in learning, and
make learning more accessible and beneficial, has to be a good thing.”
For more information
www.buzanpluseducation.com
www.modellearning.com
www.logovisual.com
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