Topic: Gestalt Principles of Perception
Level 1 (Easy Read)
Who is this for?
- People with learning disabilities
- Autistic people
- People with dyslexia
- Students new to psychology
- Families and carers
What is Gestalt?
Your brain is always trying to make sense of the world.
Instead of looking at lots of tiny pieces, your brain puts them together to make one picture.
This is called Gestalt.
A simple saying is:
"The whole is greater than the sum of its parts."
This means that when all the pieces are put together, they create something more meaningful than each piece on its own.
Why is Gestalt important?
Gestalt helps us:
- recognise faces
- read words
- understand pictures
- drive safely
- recognise danger
- organise information
- learn new things
Without Gestalt, the world would feel confusing.
The Seven Principles
| Principle | Easy Meaning | Everyday Example |
|---|---|---|
| Proximity | Close things belong together. | Chairs around one table look like one group. |
| Similarity | Things that look alike belong together. | Students wearing the same school uniform. |
| Closure | The brain fills in missing pieces. | Reading a broken letter and still recognising it. |
| Continuity | Your eyes follow smooth lines. | Railway tracks disappearing into the distance. |
| Figure and Ground | We separate objects from the background. | Reading black writing on white paper. |
| Symmetry | Balanced shapes are easier to understand. | Butterfly wings. |
| Common Fate | Things moving together belong together. | Birds flying in a flock. |
Everyday Life
You use Gestalt every day without realising it.
Examples include:
- Reading books
- Watching television
- Crossing roads
- Shopping
- Using websites
- Looking at signs
- Recognising family members
- Finding your car in a car park
Learning Disability Perspective
Some people process visual information differently.
This may include people with:
- learning disabilities
- autism
- dyslexia
- acquired brain injuries
- dementia
- visual processing difficulties
This doesn't mean they cannot understand visual information. It means they may benefit from information being presented more clearly, with fewer distractions or extra supports.
Helpful strategies include:
- using plain language
- keeping layouts uncluttered
- adding meaningful pictures
- using consistent colours and symbols
- giving one instruction at a time
- allowing extra time to process information
Mental Health Perspective
When someone is experiencing anxiety, stress, depression, or sensory overload, concentrating on visual information can become more difficult.
For example, a busy shopping centre with flashing signs, loud music, and lots of movement may feel overwhelming.
Helpful approaches include:
- reducing visual clutter
- using calm colours
- providing quiet spaces
- breaking information into smaller sections
- offering information in different formats (written, spoken, or visual)
How Professionals Can Help
Teachers, support workers, nurses, psychologists, and employers can make information easier to understand by:
- using large, clear fonts
- leaving plenty of white space
- avoiding unnecessary decorations
- using headings and bullet points
- pairing words with simple pictures where appropriate
- checking understanding rather than assuming it
Activity
Look around the room.
Can you find:
- three examples of Proximity?
- three examples of Similarity?
- one example of Closure?
- one example of Figure and Ground?
Quick Quiz
- What does Gestalt mean?
- Which principle fills in missing information?
- Why do birds flying together look like one group?
- What is the difference between Figure and Ground?
- Can you think of an example of Similarity?
Key Words
- Brain
- Perception
- Vision
- Pattern
- Similarity
- Proximity
- Closure
- Continuity
- Figure
- Ground
- Symmetry
- Common Fate
Remember
Your brain is always looking for patterns.
It groups information together to help you understand the world quickly.
That is what Gestalt psychology is all about.
Website Extras
For your website, I think it would be helpful to include additional sections such as:
- "Did You Know?" – short, interesting facts.
- "In Everyday Life" – examples from home, school, work, and the community.
- "For Families and Carers" – practical tips for support.
- "For Professionals" – guidance for inclusive communication and reasonable adjustments.
- "My Experience" – where you share your own experiences and insights to make the topic more personal and relatable.
- "Further Learning" – links to trusted organisations and additional resources.
- "Downloads" – Easy Read PDFs, worksheets, PowerPoint slides, and quizzes.
A vision for your resource
Over the past few weeks, we've built notes on the brain, the nervous system, sensation, perception, vision, hearing, the other senses, and now Gestalt principles. We can gradually turn these into a complete, accessible library for psychology and disability learning.
It could include:
- Level 1 (Easy Read)
- Level 2 (more detailed study)
- Worksheets
- Revision guides
- PowerPoint presentations
- Trainer notes
- Quizzes
- Case studies
- Resources for learners, families, carers, students, and professionals
Given your background in advocacy and training, adding practical examples and lived experience alongside the psychology concepts could make the material especially valuable for people working in the learning disability and mental health fields. I look forward to helping you build it step by step.