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Learning Styles and Multiple Intelligences http://home.comcast.net/~saponaro/learningstyles.htm

Learning Styles and Multiple Intelligences http://home.comcast.net/~saponaro/learningstyles.htm. Sensory - The Four Modalities. Those who prefer a visual learning style... ...look at the teacher's face intently ...like looking at wall displays, books etc.

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Learning Styles and Multiple Intelligences http://home.comcast.net/~saponaro/learningstyles.htm

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  1. Learning Styles and Multiple Intelligences http://home.comcast.net/~saponaro/learningstyles.htm

  2. Sensory - The Four Modalities • Those who prefer a visual learning style... • ...look at the teacher's face intently • ...like looking at wall displays, books etc. • ...often recognize words by sight • ...use lists to organize their thoughts • ...recall information by remembering how it was set out on a page • Those who prefer an auditory learning style... • ...like the teacher to provide verbal instructions • ...like dialogues, discussions and plays • ...solve problems by talking about them • ...use rhythm and sound as memory aids • Those who prefer a kinesthetic learning style... • ...learn best when they are involved or active • ...find it difficult to sit still for long periods • ...use movement as a memory aid • Those who prefer a tactile way of learning... • ...use writing and drawing as memory aids • ...learn well in hands-on activities like projects and demonstrations http://www.teachingenglish.org.uk/think/methodology/learning_style.shtml

  3. Teaching Implications • Visual • Use many visuals in the classroom. For example, wall displays posters, realia, flash cards, graphic organizers etc. • Auditory • Use audio tapes and videos, storytelling, songs, jazz chants, memorization and drills • Allow learners to work in pairs and small groups regularly. • Kinesthetic • Use physical activities, competitions, board games, role plays etc. • Intersperse activities which require students to sit quietly with activities that allow them to move around and be active • Tactile • Use board and card games, demonstrations, projects, role plays etc. • Use while-listening and reading activities. For example, ask students to fill in a table while listening to a talk, or to label a diagram while reading

  4. Perceptual - Left-brain dominated vs. right-brain dominated • Students who are left-brain dominated... • ...are intellectual • ...process information in a linear way • ...tend to be objective • ...prefer established, certain information • ...rely on language in thinking and remembering • Those who are right-brain dominated... • ...are intuitive • ...process information in a holistic way • ...tend to be subjective • ...prefer elusive, uncertain information • ...rely on drawing and manipulating to help them think and learn

  5. Teaching Implications • Left-brain dominated • Give verbal instructions and explanations • Set some closed tasks to which students can discover the "right" answer • Right-brained dominated • Write instructions as well as giving them verbally • Demonstrate what you would like students to do • Give students clear guidelines, a structure, for tasks • Set some open-ended tasks for which there is no "right" answer • Use realia and other things that students can manipulate while learning • Sometimes allow students to respond by drawing

  6. Personal Talents - Gardner’s Multiple Intelligences Kinesthetic Body smart Dancers, athletes Mathematical/Logical Math smart Engineers, computer specialists, chaoticians Intrapersonal People smart Politicians, newscasters, lawyers, teachers Interpersonal Self smart Psychiatrists, guidance Verbal/Linguistic Book smart Writers, lyricists, reporters Visual/ Spatial Art smart Artists, cartographers Musical Music smart Musicians, DJ’s, sound engineers Naturalist Nature smart Biologists, botanists, conservationists

  7. Cognitive Information Processing – Kolb’s Model • There are four learning dimensions in this model. • Concrete experience- • learning from specific experiences, relating to people, and sensitivity to feelings and people • Reflective observation- • careful observation before making a judgement, viewing things from different perspectives, and looking for the meaning of things • Abstract conceptualization- • Logical analysis of ideas, systematic planning, acting on intellectual understanding of a situation • Active experimentation - • ability to get things done, risk taking, influence people and events through action

  8. By combining these two opposite dimensions we get four quadrants of learning behavior:

  9. Teaching Implications • Type I learner: • You are primarily a "hands-on" learner. You tend to rely on intuition rather than logic. You like to rely on other people's analysis rather than your own. You enjoy applying your learning in real life situations. • Type II learner: • You like to look at things from many points of view. You would rather watch rather than take action. You like to gather information and create many categories for things. You like using your imagination in problem solving. You are very sensitive to feelings when learning. • Type III learner: • You like solving problems and finding practical solutions and uses for your learning. You shy away from social and interpersonal issues and prefer technical tasks. • Type IV Learner: • You are concise and logical. Abstract ideas and concepts are more important to you than people issues. Practicality is less important to you than a good logical explanation.

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