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Learning Styles

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Gateway Engineering Education Coalition. 1. Learning Styles. An ... that is presented in an organized, logical fashion and benefits from reflection ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Learning Styles


1
Learning Styles
  • An Introduction to the Ways People Learn

2
Learning Styles Topics
  • Background
  • Learning Style Models
  • Teaching to All Types
  • References

3
Background
  • Students have different learning styles
  • Learning styles describe how students prefer to
    and are best able to receive and process
    information

4
Background
  • Learning styles indicate preferences for
  • Facts and data
  • Theories and models
  • Visual presentation pictures and diagrams
  • Verbal presentation written and spoken
  • Active and interactive learning
  • Introspective and individual learning

5
Background
  • Teaching solely in a manner not well suited to a
    students learning style may cause enough
    discomfort to interfere with learning

6
Background
  • However
  • Teaching only to the preferred modes may result
    in students lacking the mental agility to reach
    their potential academically and professionally
  • In other wordsthey might not adapt well

7
Learning Style Models
  • Three common learning styles models include
  • Kolbs Learning Style Model
  • Felder-Silverman Learning Style Model
  • Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI)

8
Kolbs Learning Style
  • Type 1 Concrete, Reflective
  • Type 2 Abstract, Reflective
  • Type 3 Abstract, Active
  • Type 4 Concrete, Active

9
Kolbs Learning Style
  • Type 1 Concrete, Reflective
  • Typically asks Why?
  • Responds well to explanations of how course
    material relates to their experience, their
    interests, and their future careers
  • To be successful with Type 1, the instructor
    should motivate

10
Kolbs Learning Style
  • Type 2 Abstract, Reflective
  • Typically asks What?
  • Responds well to information that is presented in
    an organized, logical fashion and benefits from
    reflection
  • Instructor should function as an expert

11
Kolbs Learning Style
  • Type 3 Abstract, Active
  • Typically asks How?
  • Responds well to working actively on well-defined
    tasks and by trial-and-error in an environment
    that allows them to fail safely
  • Instructor should function as a coach by
    providing guided practice and feedback.

12
Kolbs Learning Style
  • Type 4 Concrete, Active
  • Typically asks What if?
  • Prefers to apply course material in new
    situations to solve real problems.
  • Instructor should stay out of the way to let
    students discover things on their own.

13
Felder-Silverman
  • Sensing/Intuitive
  • Visual/Verbal
  • Inductive/Deductive
  • Active/Reflective
  • Sequential/Global

14
Felder-Silverman
  • Sensing
  • Concrete, Practical
  • Oriented toward facts and procedures
  • Intuitive
  • Conceptual, Innovative
  • Oriented toward theories and meanings

15
Felder-Silverman
  • Visual
  • Prefer visual representations of material
  • Pictures, Diagrams, Flow charts
  • Verbal
  • Prefer written and spoken explanations

16
Felder-Silverman
  • Inductive
  • Prefer presentations that proceed from the
    specific to the general
  • Deductive
  • Prefer presentations that go from general to the
    specific

17
Felder-Silverman
  • Active
  • Learn by trying things out
  • Prefer working with others
  • Reflective
  • Learn by thinking things through
  • Prefer working alone

18
Felder-Silverman
  • Sequential
  • Linear, Orderly
  • Learn in small incremental steps
  • Global
  • Holistic, Systems thinkers
  • Learn in large leaps

19
Myers-Briggs
  • Extraverts/Introverts
  • Sensors/Intuitors
  • Thinkers/Feelers
  • Judgers/Perceivers

20
Myers-Briggs
  • Extraverts
  • Like to try things out
  • Focus on the outer world of people
  • Introverts
  • Think things through
  • Focus on the inner world of ideas

21
Myers-Briggs
  • Sensors
  • Practical
  • Detail-oriented
  • Focus on facts and procedures
  • Intuitors
  • Imaginative
  • Concept-oriented
  • Focus on meanings and possibilities

22
Myers-Briggs
  • Thinkers
  • Skeptical
  • Tend to make decisions based on logic and rules
  • Feelers
  • Appreciative
  • Tend to make decisions based on personal and
    humanistic considerations

23
Myers-Briggs
  • Judgers
  • Set and follow agendas
  • Seek closure even with incomplete data
  • Perceivers
  • Adapt to changing circumstances
  • Resist closure to obtain more data

24
Teaching to All Types
  • Appealing to a wide array of learning styles can
    be achieved, based on the Felder-Silverman model,
    by

25
Teaching to All Types
  • Using plots, graphics, and demonstrations along
    with oral and written explanations
    (visual/verbal)
  • Balancing concrete information such as
    experimental results with conceptual information
    like theories and models (sensing/intuitive)

26
Teaching to All Types
  • Demonstrating the logical flow of material but
    also making connections to other classes, topics,
    and everyday experiences (sequential/global)
  • Encouraging or requiring cooperative learning
    (all learning styles)

27
Teaching to All Types
  • Asking students to explain a general principle
    given only experimental observations (inductive)
  • Providing in class time for students to consider
    the material presented as well as for active
    participation (reflective/active)

28
References
  • Matters of Style, Felder, Richard, ASEE Prism,
    6(4), 18-23, December 1996
  • http//www.ncsu.edu/felder-public/
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