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DSRP diagrams are a graphic organizer for modeling ideas using the DSRP method of thinking. The DSRP theory and method posits that four patterns, Distinctions, Systems, Relationships, and Perspectives, underlie all cognition, that they are universal to the process of structuring information, and that people can improve their thinking skills by learning to use the four elements explicitly. This diagramming technique was developed by Derek Cabrera and Laura Colosi to work in parallel with ThinkBlocks or other tactile manipulatives, and the symbols used to represent Distinctions, Systems, Relationships, and Perspectives are common to both the diagrams and blocks.

Educational philosophy
Derek Cabrera has said that his educational philosophy has been influenced by Jean Piaget's constructivism, and one of the underlying tenets of the DSRP method is the idea that humans build knowledge. Cabrera and Colosi pair this with another precept: that knowledge changes. Because of this, they believe that thinking skills—i.e. "how to know" are just as important as "what to know" (i.e. content knowledge), and that people who learn to use the DSRP method explicitly will improve six types of thinking skills: critical thinking, creative thinking, systems thinking, interdisciplinary thinking, scientific thinking, and emotional intelligence/prosocial thinking.

DSRP diagrams are a tool for visualizing information and knowledge. They fall within a class of tools known as graphic organizers. Unlike other graphic organizers, though, which impose an external structure on information, DSRP diagrams expose the underlying patterns in how the human brain structures information. DSRP diagrams are one facet of the DSRP method and are promoted as a form of nonlinguistic representation of ideas, based on research showing that learners acquire and structure knowledge more effectively when information is presented in both linguistic and nonlinguistic formats.

Diagram components
DSRP diagrams use common symbols to represent distinctions, systems, relationships, and perspectives. Distinctions are represented by either assigning an identity to an object (i.e. one square will be labeled "Living" and another "Non-living") or by drawing in a colored triangle. Systems are represented by different sized open shapes (i.e. square or triangle) to represent part and whole. Relationships are shown using by lines and arrows. Perspectives are denoted by diagonal slashes meant to represent a mirror.

Applications
DSRP diagramming has been used extensively in educational settings.