Learning Styles

Introduction to
Learning Styles

by Marcia L. Conner

 

You may realize that people learn and process information in different ways, but can you describe what those differences are or improve the unique ways that you learn? For decades, education researchers designed models that differentiate how people learn, yet the results are often harder to understand than the people they describe.

This introduction puts learning styles information into easy to understand language and provides sources where you can learn more. I also offer a Learning Style Assessment  that you can use to gauge your dominant learning style and techniques you can use to benefit from your individuality.

 

Overview of learning styles

Learning styles classify different ways people learn and how they approach information.

If you feel like you can't learn something important - even after you use a method a friend, a parent, a colleague, or a teacher suggested - you might have a different learning style than that person and their approach might now be the best approach for you. You learn and processes information in your own special way, though we all share some learning patterns, preferences, and approaches. Knowing your own style can also help you realize that other people may approach the same situation in a way that's different from your own.

I meet learners of all ages who think they're dim, dumb, lazy, or crazy because they can't understand materials the way the others do. When these learners can match the way they approach information with the way they learn, they see dramatic improvements in understanding, meaning making, self-image, and for students - grades.

Learning style assessments provide you an opportunity to learn how you are likely to respond under different circumstances and how to approach information in a way that best addresses your own particular needs.

 

Perceptual Modalities

The learning styles assessments I find most helpful examine how you take in information through your senses. Researchers call these sorts of assessments "perceptual modality assessments." They look at how you see, hear, feel, and move through the world. Those perceptions deeply affect your ability to learn. Whether you tend to rely more or less on one sense than another has a tremendous influence on how you interpret new experiences and succeed in whatever you work with each day. Take a perceptual modality assessment now.

Multiple Intelligences

Howard Gardner asserts there are at least seven modalities (referred to as intelligences) that can be used to describe your individual style. His work encourages everyone to think about learning in new and creative ways. On this site I link to several multiple intelligences assessments.

This work suggests people can be:

  1. Verbal-linguistic: sensitive to the meaning and order of words
  2. Musical: sensitive to pitch, melody, rhythm, and tone
  3. Logical-mathematical: Able to handle chains of reasoning and recognize patterns and order
  4. Spatial: perceive the world accurately and try to re-create or transform aspects of that world
  5. Bodily-kinesthetic: able to use the body skillfully and handle objects adroitly
  6. Interpersonal: understand people and relationships
  7. Intrapersonal: possess access to one's emotional life as a means to understand oneself and others.

 

Mind Styles

According to Anthony Gregorc, there are four basic learning styles. Gregorc's Mind Styles model categorizes learners as Concrete Sequential (CS), Abstract Sequential (AS) Abstract Random (AR) and Concrete Random (CR).

  1. Concrete Sequential (CS) learners are hardworking, conventional, accurate, stable, dependable, consistent, factual, and organized.
  2. Abstract Sequential (AS) learners are analytic, objective, knowledgeable, thorough, structured, logical, deliberate, and systematic.
  3. Abstract Random (AR) learners are sensitive, compassionate, perceptive, imaginative, idealistic, sentimental, spontaneous, and flexible.
  4. Concrete Random (CR) learners are quick, intuitive, curious, realistic, creative, innovative, instinctive, adventurous.

 

Learning Styles Indicator

David Kolb's Learning Style Model classifies learners as having a preference for 1) concrete experience or abstract conceptualization (how they take information in), and 2) active experimentation or reflective observation (how they internalize information).

  1. Type 1 (concrete, reflective). A characteristic question of this learning type is "Why?" Type 1 learners respond well to explanations of how course material relates to their experience, their interests, and their future careers. To be effective with Type 1 students, the instructor should function as a motivator.
  2. Type 2 (abstract, reflective). A characteristic question of this learning type is "What?" Type 2 learners respond to information presented in an organized, logical fashion and benefit if they have time for reflection. To be effective, the instructor should function as an expert.
  3. Type 3 (abstract, active). A characteristic question of this learning type is "How?" Type 3 learners respond to having opportunities to work actively on well-defined tasks and to learn by trial-and-error in an environment that allows them to fail safely. To be effective, the instructor should function as a coach, providing guided practice and feedback.
  4. Type 4 (concrete, active). A characteristic question of this learning type is "What if?" Type 4 learners like applying course material in new situations to solve real problems. To be effective, the instructor should stay out of the way, maximizing opportunities for the students to discover things for themselves.

 

Myers-Briggs

The Myers-Briggs Type Indicator, based on the work of Carl Jung identifies 16 personality styles based on:

How you relate to the world (Extravert or Introvert)

Extraverts try things out, focus on the world around

Introverts think things through, focus on the inner world of ideas.

How you take in information (Sensing or iNtuiting)

Sensors (practical, detail-oriented, focus on facts and procedures)

Intuitors (imaginative, concept-oriented, focus on meanings and possibilities)

How you make decisions (Thinking or Feeling)

Thinkers are skeptical, tend to make decisions based on logic and rules

Feelers are appreciative, tend to make decisions based on personal and humanistic considerations

How you manage your life (Judging or Perceiving).

Judgers set and follow agendas, seek closure even with incomplete data

Perceivers adapt to changing circumstances, resist closure to obtain more data.

For example, one learner may be an ESTJ (extravert, sensor, thinker, perceiver) and another may be an INFJ (introvert, intuitor, feeler, judger). On this site I include links to several temperament assessments.

 

Others

There are other ways to organize learning style models. These fall into general categories such as information processing, personality patterns, and social interaction.

 

Information processing distinguishes between the way you sense, think, solve problems, and remember information. You have a preferred, consistent, distinct way of perceiving, organizing, and retaining information. Kolb's Learning Styles inventory, Gregorc's Mind Styles Model, and Keefe's Human Information Processing Model.

Personality patterns focus on attention, emotion, and values. Understanding these differences allows you to predict the way you'll react and feel about different situations. The Myers-Briggs Type Indicator and the Keirsey Temperament Sorter are two of the most well-know personality pattern assessments. A lesser known assessment is Dellinger's Psycho-Geometrics.

Social interaction looks at likely attitudes, habits, and strategies learners will take toward their work and how they engage with their peers when they learn. Some learners are independent, dependent, collaborative, competitive, participant, and avoidant. Reichmann and Grasha as well as Baxter Magolda have developed assessments.

 

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