Graphicacy

Graphicacy is defined as the ability to understand and present information in the form of sketches, photographs, diagrams, maps, plans, charts, graphs and other non-textual formats. == Origin == The word graphicacy was coined in 1965 by geographers William Balchin and Alice Coleman as a characterisation of visuo-spatial and cartographic abilities, "the communication of spatial information that cannot be conveyed adequately by verbal or numerical means", including the whole field of graphic arts and much of geography, cartography, computer-graphics, and photography.

Source: Wikipedia — Graphicacy (CC BY-SA 4.0)

Graphicacy

Graphicacy is defined as the ability to understand and present information in the form of sketches, photographs, diagrams, maps, plans, charts, graphs and other non-textual formats. == Origin == The word graphicacy was coined in 1965 by geographers William Balchin and Alice Coleman as a characterisation of visuo-spatial and cartographic abilities, "the communication of spatial information that cannot be conveyed adequately by verbal or numerical means", including the whole field of graphic arts and much of geography, cartography, computer-graphics, and photography.

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Source: Wikipedia "Graphicacy" · CC BY-SA 4.0

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