This activity demonstrates our ability to remember details accurately. Testimony about personal experience is frequently used during an investigation. How accurately do people remember what they have seen? What factors may play a role in what we can remember and describe about something we have witnessed? Consider these questions as you do the following activity.
Directions:
- Observe the picture or color picture for exactly 30 seconds. Look at everything you think might be important.
- After 30 seconds, answer the questions below on a sheet of paper. (Do not read the questions before you look at the picture!!)
- How observant were you? Compare your answers to the picture.
Questions:
- What time was it on the clock?
- How many people were in the scene? How many males? females?
- Describe the person at the front of the line. Was it a man or a woman? Was he or she wearing a hat? What kind of clothes was the person wearing? Could you tell how tall the person was? Did he or she have any distinguishing features?
- What day of the month was it?
- Did you notice anything unusual in the picture?
Additional Challenge:
Try this activity with another picture. This time, put the picture away overnight and try to remember what you saw in the picture.
Go on to the next Observation Activity.
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