It is surprising how life loops around returning to similar, perhaps familiar would be a more appropriate word, ideas. My first foray into developing curriculum using technology started in 1968 at a company called Ealing in their Film Loop division as their physical science and math editor. I was to teach single concepts, as we called them, to students on silent films. The technology, a clever relatively cheap system developed by Technicolor, was designed to make film so easy to use that students and teachers could use it by themselves. In Jr. and high school I was one of those techies who set up and ran movies for teachers carting in and threading those hefty 16 mm projectors. I immediately saw the advantages of this new simplified technology.
I had no choice. Text on film either as silent movie “cards” or captions over images wasted valuable film. I had to learn a new discipline, to picture a concept or tell a story with pictures and not words. I have always considered the opportunity to master this skill one of the great good fortunes of my life. You will, I hope, see in these Labs powerful visualizations of single concepts that your students can build their problem-solving abilities upon. And despite the lifting of those film technology constraints, the need for visualization and limited verbalization remain keys to student conceptualization and attention.