The Effect Of The Infographic Strategy On The Achievement And Development Of Visual Thinking Among The Second-Year Intermediate Students In The Social Subject

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Hanaa Ibrahim Mohamed

Abstract

The current research aims to find out the impact of the infographic strategy in the achievement and development of visual thinking among second-grade intermediate students in the subject of social science by verifying the validity of the following null hypotheses. There is no statistically significant difference at the level of significance (0.05) between the average scores of the students of the experimental group who study the social subject according to the infographic strategy and the average scores of the students of the control group who study the same subject in the usual way in the post-achievement test.There is no statistically significant difference at the level of significance (0.05) between the average scores of the students of the experimental group who study social studies according to the infographic strategy and the average scores of the students of the control group who study the same subject according to the usual method of the dimensional visual thinking test.There is no statistically significant difference at the level of significance (0.05) between the average grades of the experimental group students who study the social subject according to the infographic strategy in the pre- and post-visual thinking scale.There is no statistically significant difference at the level of significance (0.05) between the average scores of the control group students who study the subject of social studies according to the usual method in the pre- and post-visual thinking scale.To verify this, the researcher used an experimental design with partial control with the experimental and control groups, and the pre- and post-tests. According to the infographic strategy and Division (E), the control group is represented, which is taught in the usual way. The number of female students in the two groups was (56), of which (26) were students in Division (D) and (30) were students in Division (E). The researcher did not find female students who had failed in the same phase year. The researcher used the same conditions for the two groups of research in the following variables: academic achievement of fathers, academic achievement of mothers, chronological age calculated in months, scores for the pre-visual thinking scale, IQ test scores, degrees of social science from the 2016/2017 academic year.

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