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IS YOUR FIRST LANAGUAGE YOUR OWN VISUAL LANGUAGE ?

Watch highlights from the February 2026 reunion call with artist Christopher Jarratt — more than 20 years after he was first introduced to the Footnotes Visual Multi-layered Program in 2002.

Having not seen Christopher for over two decades, it was a real pleasure to reconnect and reflect on how the Footnotes approach supported him during his degree — particularly while preparing his dissertation — and how those visual thinking skills have continued to shape his creative practice and communication ever since.

In this thoughtful conversation, Christopher shares insights into how structuring ideas visually helped him clarify complex concepts, build confidence in his thinking, and communicate more effectively — skills that remain central to his work today.

We also discussed how relevant these approaches feel for the next generation. While his daughter is still at an earlier stage in her learning journey, Christopher recognises how valuable visual thinking methods could be for her going forward.

A key theme in our conversation was the importance of recognising the unique ways visual learners arrive at a finished project — and ensuring those processes are properly understood, valued, and supported. Christopher is keen to support my wider mission to engage with policymakers and influence how visual learners are recognised and encouraged, both in education and in future career settings.

If you’re interested in the power of visual thinking, creativity in higher education, or the long-term impact of learning how different minds work, this conversation offers valuable perspective.

YouTube player

If you’d like to be involved in future conversations exploring the importance of visual thinking skills, we’d love to hear from you — please get in touch.

Footnotes – Project Rooms

Footnotes Project Rooms. Part of the Footnotes Activity Centers initiative

Others Include :  Enterprise Studios – Open Space Projects – Language Labs – Memory Recall Rooms & Make It Workshops 

Each Footnotes Project Room is unique. However here are some of the underpinning values, which most if not all Project Rooms will share.

Mainstream Integrated OR Fresh Start Programs 

Footnotes Project Rooms can function as stand-alone environments or in tandem with traditional class-based systems. By applying FootnotesVMT Grid-ing techniques, effective personalised learning routines enable learners of all ages and abilities to move at their own pace without losing connection to a common teaching pathway.

 “All kinds of learners can engage their preferred learning styles in a new and fresh way, whilst sharing more of their learning experience with their peers.” 

  • Attend an introduction to Project Room session ( Includes Footnotes Grid Module training ) 
Promoting self directed learning routines for students of all ages and abilities. 

Students are invited to apply to join a “Project Room” Timetable.

Project room readiness & requirements : 

  • Show an understanding of how Project Rooms work  + How Footnotes Grids facilitate personalised learning journeys.  
  • Before arriving at the Project Room, students would have ideally started their project with  the use of supporting Grids. That way they can join a session with either their own set of targets or at least an understanding of how Project Rooms work. ( In main stream scenarios students might have been briefed or have used “home work” time to make a start)
  • Project Rooms motivate and equip students to further their projects in their own time. ( Provides a much more comfortable equivalent to set “Home work” ) 
  • If for any reason students are not engaging comfortably with a Project Room session, they can either return to a mainstream learning setting or for example attend a different Project Room session – Topics include : Top Up Footnotes Grid-ing techniques, Personal Management, Careers & Aspirations support. 

Subject Specialist Delivery ( Scheduled )

Specialist support is available from teachers, lecturers, technicians and also guests, to help students engage and accelerate their project progress. Support might include:  

  • Teacher/Lecturer presentations 
  • Teacher/Lecturer Q&A support
  • Visiting speaker presentations   ( including online webinars ) 
  • Technician delivered Pre recorded video presentations & webinars 
  • Peer to peer &  parent lead activities 
Study/Home Room styles – schedules

Free Flow – Check in and check out provision. Support might include:

  • Technician support eg: IT and AI related help including researching skills
  • Librarian support – If a Project Room environment is near or in a library
  • Peer to peer &  parent sharing 
  • shared Quiet Space sessions
  • Vlog, Podcast, dictation recording support 
  • Footnotes International Project Room –  scheduled meet up video calls 
  • Study skills labs – experimenting and establishing personal methods and routines. 
  • limited access challenges – eg: behavioural change programs – value & participation cues 
  • Timetabled To > Drop In 
Multiage participation 

Due to the nature of Footnotes Grid-ing techniques, students of a broader age range and ability can usefully learn together.  

  • Information can be delivered to Grid-ers with a multi-level focus during the same Project Room session.
  • Teaching resources such as film, interactive boards and IT suites can help students to glean on an individual basis whilst feeling the motivation of Grid-ing together. 
  • Specialists and potential future employers can effectively present and Q & A to high level learners in the same space and time frame as those just starting out in the new topic. 
  • Interaction between students at different stages can help to consolidate and bring greater to relevance to the subject overall. 
  • The process of learning from one another is heightened so that the lead professional is more likely facilitating rather than having to be the only source of all influence. 
  • Live demonstrations, experiments and even site visits can be more possible due the students being used to a more varied timetable, (inc learning intensive events) A greater age and ability range = More in-depth live project potential. 
  • These shared Grid-ing experiences help to broaden the “take away “ potential, as each individual Grid-er are more likely to bring their own unique contribution to the session. Facilitators also benefit, as they can be usefully informed re prepping for the next session. 
Scalable Group Sizes 

Personal or Shared

  • Small group to amphitheatre style engagement 
  •  Multi one to one to large lecture delivery
  • Small rooms to large outdoor open spaces
Scalable Beginnings!

Just Start!

  • From One to One to > Small Group to  > Community Embedded
  •  Session Based ( In Parallel ) OR > Partially Integrated (self elected) Or > Extra Curricular Or > Fresh ( Scheduled) 
Fast Track Qualification & Career Preparation

Project Rooms enable students to set their own pace of readiness. For example: in preparation for exams. Students can : 

  • Accelerate their completion of course materials – In some cases meaning that a student can be ready to sit an exam one or more years ahead of mainstream students of a similar age 
  • Revision based Project Room schedules, enable students to revise together. 
  • Students can be more easily prepared for other forms of assessments, Eg: Oral based exams and interviews through to Visual – video/website essay equivalents.  
  • Learn to Apprenticeship Programs & Sponsorships
Life Long Learning & Wellbeing 

Neuroplasticity and beyond!

  • Making space ( literally) for learning about self and others.
  • Focus can shift easily between Identity, Restorative Practice , Future Scaping & Learning. 
  • Intergenerational collaboration grows wisdom & respect
  • Focus & Flow, Learning Rigour & Time Management 
  • Flexitime Grid-ing – Bespoke Session Duration & Timetabling
  • Return & recalibrate – Revisit projects & update or Fresh start themes (life long membership)
Relevant Environments 

Redesigning how we use space! 

  • Varied seating, lighting, soundproofing, Tec, in & outside
  •  Location specific – community, recreation, healthcare, industry, land management & resources 
  • Mobile facilities – for field trips & access promotion 
  • In Nature Emersives
Empowerment through Assessment 

Making the best of assessment :

  • Continuous Assessment ( Reducing the need to for exams)
  • Self Assessment (encouraging personal project based learning )
  • Group and Peer to Peer Assessment ( Creating markers for good practice whilst sharing ways of evaluating) 
  • Students can be more easily prepared for other forms of assessments, Eg: Oral based exams and interviews through to Visual – video/website essay equivalents.  
Embracing Technology To Assist

Tailored Tec – For Each Individual Grid-er

  • Footnotes APP
  • Digital Grid Sharing
  • Ai Enhanced Dictation To Text
  • Sound Enhancing & Canceling Tec
  • Multi task & Viewing Tec
  • Translation Tools
Inter-Institutional Collaboration

Worldwide Community 

  • Forging new forms of “learning” Eg: Shared Primary school & Undergraduate ventures  
  • Student Live projects & Commerce 
  • Multicultural consultations – “ How the others live and learn” 
  • Establishing Fresh Policy & Curriculums in real time 
  • Student teachers and school aged students learning together 
  • Children and Parents learning together 
Out of school provision 

Learning together – celebrating unique learning needs 

  • Students used to one to one support can become more self guided. 
  • Health sensitive – Dip in and out provision. Making it possible to make a start & pace it! 
  • Homeschoolers coming together. Safe to be as you are . Not led, rather facilitated 
  • Behaviour related fresh start programs 
Senior Management & Policy Makers 

Steering the ship – Incremental & reboot empowerment

  • Valuing The Team
  • Sharing the responsibility 
  • Making the most of expertise 
  • Shared  excelence marketing 
  • In Service re training 
  • Colleague swap initiatives – Give and receive  
  • Retire ? As much as you want to – keeping the wise ones in community 
Community leadership & Governance 

For the people by the people 

  • Community listening spaces 
  • Making decisions – vote it systems 
  • Community care and motivation 
Project Room Specs 

Inovative Spaces 

  • Small Scale To > Open Plan
  • Adapted To > Purpose Built ( Eg: Existing IT Suite Or Library)
  • Project Rooms Learning Labs In The Workplace
  • Natural Environments
  • Interactive Technology Pods
Project Room Theme examples 

New subjects for new situations 

  • Traditional “Western Education “
  • .Discovering Identity 
  • Preparing for AI 
  • Conversational skills 
  • Etc etc ……….
What’s so special about Footnotes Project Rooms ?

Personalised Learning Together!

  • Self Initiated Learning – Personalised Work Flow Routines
  • Integrated Self & Collective Assessment
  • Personal Focus State Management – Fast vs Exstended
  • Trust & Accountability Culture – Its a choice!
  • Scalable learning targets – Student instigated
  • Age Is Not A Benchmark – Ability before age measures
  • Circular Thinking – Live projects – Continuous Easy Step In Step Out
  • Ownership & Shared Visions
  • Grows Expectancy – No Limits Thinking
  • Grid Anywhere – Environments 
  • Embracing Assistive Tec – Eg: Grid to > Ai – Dictation, Search & Compile
  • Cost effective – Paper & Pencil Gets Things Underway
  • Broad Cultural Relevance – Non specific
  • Multilingual Access
  • Never Too Young, Never Too Old
  • Brings Learning Into the Market Place
  • Maximising Learning Styles – Hyper Focused State etc

Latest YouTube Video

Webinar & Podcast Archive

Footnotes VMT Webinars

CONNECT :

  • In March, June, September & December
  • The same session will be hosted three times in one week to suit different time zones.
  • Join live at the time that works best for you.
  • Replay available on your account dashboard if you can’t attend.
  • Session times (GMT): Sunday: 11:30 – 12:30, Wednesday: 09:00 – 10:00 Friday: 16:00 – 17:00
  • Book your preferred day by getting in touch.

CONNECT VIP* :

  • Connect VIP* members can optionally open their tutorial to other members if a one-to-one session isn’t needed.
  • Other members can request to join shared sessions to learn together.
  • Sessions may run after quarterly webinars or at a time that suits the VIP member.
  • More shared sessions = more topics covered for the whole community.

CONNECT+ :

  • These 4x sessions can run quarterly or as a sprint.
  • Please get in touch if you don’t yet have confirmation of dates.
  • More details on specialising with Connect+ plans

View webinar & podcast archive

Upcoming Webinars / Q & A

Footnotes VMT Webinars : Q&A Sessions with FootnotesVMT creator Oliver West

Influence where our future webinar discussions go, by sharing your questions and topic suggestions ahead of time!

Welcome to the Community

One of my favourite reoccurring moments in my Footnotes journey, is where i see complete strangers who have never seen another “Grid-er” before, suddenly realising that everyone else in the room is a Grid-er too!! For many its such a sense of relief and excitement, as theres suddenly loads to easily talk about and share!

This coming together has so many benefits, too many to mention here, but we hope that you will want to join the conversation, spread the word and enjoy being part of the solution in your part of the world!

Welcome to Footnotes Community! A place to connect, network & share! Oliver West – Footnotes

We’d love to hear your Footnotes stories here: Contact and or join us on any of the social media spaces below!

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Hemispheres, Dyslexia, ADHD & the Visual Learning Revolution – Thinking with Footnotes

There are two brain hemispheres, left and right. Joined by the corpus callosum (which keeps these two symmetrical hemispheres apart, whilst also providing a path for communication). The two hemispheres interact and work together. Each perceives, and thus creates, a different kind of world!.

Iain McGilchrist explores the philosophical and psychological implications of what is known as hemispheric specialisation. He describes the way that culture and society are impacted by the unique way each hemisphere ‘attends’ to the world.

The left hemisphere is concerned with the known, with no appreciation for ambivalence – it thinks that it knows everything. It generates a mechanistic understanding of what it is to be human. It’s a world of ‘either/or’, reason, procedure, and logic.

The left hemisphere pays precise attention and reduces the world to ‘things’ and parts. It sees everything as static, separate, distinct, and disembodied – often abstracting information from its wider context.

The left hemisphere’s world is inanimate and mechanistic; it is not emotionally orientated. It pays focused attention with a view to mastery. This kind of attention serves us well in an emergency!

The right hemisphere is concerned with what we don’t know; it’s a hemisphere comfortable with mystery and paradox, seeing the broad picture. It is aware that it doesn’t know everything.

The right hemisphere’s world is creative, with high levels of emotional and social intelligence present. In perceiving the ‘whole’, the right hemisphere looks for gaps in the structure. The gaps are where the light gets in, as it were!

The right hemisphere generates a holistic, experiential understanding of what it means to be a human.

The right hemisphere’s world is one of ‘both/and’. It’s a world of coherence, connectedness, fluidity, flow and change. It’s a relational, animate, and embodied world. Reality is known within the context of presence and gestalt.

The two hemispheres of the brain are meant to work together. We need polarity, balance, and integration. We need the part AND the whole.

Within the context of the connectedness of our inner and outer worlds, McGilchrist suggests the left hemisphere has become dominant within modern Western Society.

In any given situation, our brains are offered two perceptions by both the left and the right hemisphere. Our challenge is to become aware of both, and, as a result, to make balanced decisions.

What is known as the ‘Industrial Revolution’ took place between 1750 and 1900.

Arguably, a mechanistic and reductionist way of seeing initiated and established this period of great technological advancement. This great shift likely played a key role in the left brain dominance we are experiencing at a societal level.

McGilchrist argues that nothing is isolated – not even an organelle in a cell; not even a proton, neutron, or electron. Even ‘parts’ are part of a whole, which is what he argues is the ‘matter with things’. 

Instead, he claims, we are always in process and in connection.

We are part of a ‘greater’ whole and, therefore, reduction to parts is merely an illusion.

We need to see the whole, and to become aware of what we don’t know (yet)!

It has been said that we live in a world lacking in meaning! We can call on the left hemisphere to bring some order, but we might need some help from the right hemisphere to bring some balance and harmony back into society!

More people are depressed and disconnected from their bodies, others, and ‘nature’ than ever before!

What would it look like to reintroduce awe, wonder and mystery into society?

What would it look like to reconnect with our bodies, with each other?

What would it look like to explore ways of knowing that encompassed holistic, intuitive, and imaginative thinking?

A different way of learning and knowing...

“True science has more questions than answers, and it does not have any answers that can’t be questioned.”

Albert einstein

So where does dyslexia and ADHD come into the equation?

Pioneering scientist, Albert Einstein often saw his discoveries intuitively and in his ‘mind’s eye’. Einstein was a known dyslexic and it is said that he often had to ‘work backwards’ to show how he came up with his discoveries!

Dyslexia is a title for a neurological divergency that (with the very limited testing available) is already estimated to affect at least 10% of the population worldwide. However, it’s very likely to be much higher a percentage than the current estimate.

Dyslexia is associated with a mildly impaired development of ‘magnocellular cells’ (also known as magnocells and M-cells) in the brain (see the work of Professor John Stein for more information).

Whereas some people often find linear sequencing, time-keeping, and subjects like reading, writing and maths easier, those with dyslexia might find creative subjects easier, as they see laterally, holistically, and can spot patterns.

In dyslexics and those showing ADHD tendencies, the left brain is said to remain more proficient at visual-spatial processing – even in light of the kind of ‘left dominant’ society previously mentioned.

Therefore, the dyslexi/ADHD brain works in a more balanced way, as they exhibit stronger right-brained visual thinking than for example a non-dyslexic brain. 

Stein points out that this way of seeing is more aligned to nature. Society needs dyslexics and right-brained thinkers; they often excel at subjects and skills that others don’t!

Writer, Thomas West points out that so many incredible entrepreneurs and pioneers across history have been dyslexic.

So many amazing and important and discoveries have happened as a result of this unique way of seeing!

A few examples…

Mandelbrot discovered fractal mathematics (essential for mobile phone technology); Watson and Crick were the first to envision the structure of DNA; Einstein was inspired with the ‘theory of relativity’; and Faraday was a pioneering scientist at the world-famous Royal Institute. And let’s not forget world-changing business leaders like Richard Branson.

Dyslexics and often those with ADHD often seen to be gifted with being able to see things ‘out of the box’, which can often be coupled with a greater level of fortitude, developed through overcoming the struggles associated with not thriving in left-dominant modes of education.

Creative leaning pioneer, Ken Robinson argues that we have outgrown the post-war education system. Remember the days when the ’11+’ exam decided whether students were going to attend either ‘technical’ or ‘grammar’ school? Whilst the ’11+’ has been scrapped, Robinson is highly critical of modern mass education that still prepares students for the workforce, and for the kind of standardised, mechanised society that prevails today.

We’ve divided learning up. We’ve reduced it to subjects, which are separated by ringing bells!

There is an over-focus on testing and curriculums… there’s a fear of being wrong!

This sounds a lot like the world of the left brain!

Left-brain dominant learning can be said to perpetuate some of the problems we face today. A creative approach to education would equate to a greater level of hemispheric balance, which would have society-wide and world-wide impacts.

The world is facing new challenges – an ecological crisis, a supposed overpopulation problem, and a movement towards an automated workspace. The survival of humanity depends new solutions for new problems, argues Robinson!

We need big-picture, creative solutions!

Today’s children hold the key to so many of these creative solutions, they just need to be unlocked!

We need to create a new system, one where creativity thrives, and one where every child flourishes.

We need a move away from left-brain dominance and a move towards creative education.

This isn’t just for some students, but for all students.

It’s just not good enough that some students fall behind because their uniqueness isn’t cultivated.

So where does Footnotes come into all of this?

At Footnotes, we help to support and cultivate a visual and multi-layered approach to thinking and learning. We offer a range of techniques to help all kinds of minds.

When working with people who have a dominant right hemisphere response, Footnotes plays a vital role in helping individuals to capture the important parts of the ‘big picture’.

Footnotes helps people to find realistic ways of actioning the most important subjects detailed on their ‘Grids’. 

Footnotes also helps individuals who recognise that they are left brain dominant, or who recognise that the left hemisphere plays a major part of their decision-making throughout the day.

As a result of using Footnotes, individuals are able to move themselves into new ways of processing, and potentially move away from the pitfalls of left hemisphere thinking. 

The act of drawing and thinking creatively outside of a linear requirement automatically challenges the left hemisphere dominance, giving opportunity for the right hemisphere to play its role. 

Footnotes activities directly help an individual to redress the balance of the left and the right hemispheres when problem-solving, and when making general decisions in life.

With the process of mapping thoughts out with the Footnotes Grids, individuals can directly observe thinking processes, and notice how one choice is possibly informed by either the left or the right hemisphere, or both!

A reflexive approach gives rise to opportunities for an individual to change the way they respond in a given situation.

The various Footnotes strategies available promote a multi-layered approach to learning and living life. This creative process naturally helps individuals to lead their own inquiry and to be less reliant on being led or taught. Instead, the Grid-ing process helps individuals to be intuitively aware of what they should be doing next.

Footnotes offers personalised creative thinking tools that utilise both hemispheres and encourage imagination, intuition, and therefore healthy levels of individuality – even within structured curriculum situations.

As a result of engaging with the Footnotes Programme, individuals often say that they feel more intelligent due to the awareness of being able to process thoughts and information more quickly and effectively. They often let us know that this helps them to feel more confident and more capable in their day-to-day decision making.

Many have reported looking back through their life-choices, remembering how Footnotes empowered them to be bold in pursuing their dreams and in making formative decisions.

We’ve observed huge changes in Footnotes users’ time-management abilities, and also a significant improvement in effective social interaction – due, in part, to individuals feeling more informed by their intuition and multi-sensory abilities. These huge and often immediate shifts become apparent once an individual has harnessed their natural visual thinking capabilities that emerge and are honed through ‘Grid-ing’. 

In the absence of these sorts of realisations that are uncovered through a journey of self-discovery, we witness that dyslexics become overly reliant on being lead by others (rather than leading their own learning). This dynamic is exacerbated by the large amount of testing carried out within the current education system. 

“The education system has mined our minds in the way that we strip-mine the Earth for a particular commodity, and for the future it won’t serve us.”

Ken Robinson

We need change.

We need to recreate an education system that encompasses all of the wonderfully unique ways of seeing and learning.

We need to move towards a re-balanced society; we need to envision and co-create a world of balanced minds and collectives.

The future starts now.  Happy Grid-ing!

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