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LEARNING STYLES

December 14th, 2011                                                 Prepared by Luis Machado
                                                                    /Ecuador
  Learning and Teaching Styles In Foreign and Second Language Education
  Richard M Felder, North Carolina State University
  Eunice R. Henriques, Universidade Estadual de Sao Paulo
                                                             Foreign Language Annals, 28, No. 1,1995, pp. 21–31
WHAT’S YOUR LEARNING STYLE?
LEARNING STYLE, A DEFINITION

The ways in which an individual
characteristically
acquires, retains, and retrieves
information are collectively termed
the individual’s learning style.
HOW DO STUDENTS LEARN?

 By seeing and hearing;
 Reflecting and acting;

 Reasoning logically and intuitively;

 Memorizing and visualizing.
TEACHING METHODS

Some instructors
 Lecture,

 Demonstrate or discuss;

 Focus on rules and others on examples;

 Emphasize memory and others
  understanding.
CONDITIONS FOR STUDENT’S LEARNING

 Student’s native ability;
 His/her prior preparation;

 The compatibility of his or her
  characteristic approach to learning; and
 The instructor’s characteristic approach
  to teaching.
POTENTIAL CONSEQUENCES


        Students’                               Instructors’
        Learning            mismatch            Teaching
        Styles                                  Styles




Tend to be bored in class
                                       (What is worse)
Inattentive in class
                                        May become overly critical of
Do poorly on tests                      their students
Get discouraged about the               Begin to question their own
course                                  competence as teachers.
Give up the course
DIMENSIONS OF LEARNING STYLE

 Sensing and Intuitive Learners
 Visual and Verbal Learners

 Active and Reflective Learners

 Sequential and Global Learners

 Inductive and Deductive Learners
SENSING AND INTUITIVE LEARNERS
Two ways in which people tend to perceive the world: sensation and
intuition. Jung (1971).
                    Sensors                                 Intuitors
    Concrete and methodical.                Abstract and imaginative.
    Use facts, data, and experimentation.   Use principles, concepts, and theories.
    Patient with detail but do not like     Bored by detail and welcome
    complications.                          complications.
    Rely on memorization.                   Like variety, dislike repetition.
    Careful but may be slow.                Quick but may be careless.
    Comfortable when learning and           Tend to be better equipped to
    following rules and standard            accommodate new concepts and
    procedures.                             exceptions to rules.
    Involve observing, gathering data       Involve indirect perception by way of
    through the senses.                     the subconscious— accessing memory,
                                            speculating, imagining.
EHRMAN AND OXFORD (1990) STUDY ON LEARNING STRATEGIES AND TEACHING
APPROACHES PREFERRED BY SENSORS AND INTUITORS IN AN INTENSIVE LANGUAGE
TRAINING PROGRAM



               Sensors                       Intuitors
  Used a variety of memorization Preferred teaching approaches
  strategies (internal drills and that involved greater
  flash cards)                    complexity and variety
  Liked practical class material    Tended to be bored with drills.
  Liked highly structured and       Better able to learn
  well organized classes with       independently of the
  clear goals and milestones for    instructor’s teaching style.
  achievement.
VISUAL AND VERBAL LEARNERS
       Visual Learners                             Verbal Learners
                               Learn through




      Pictures
      Diagrams
      Flow Charts                                 Spoken Explanations
      Mind maps                                   Written Explanations
      Films
      Demonstrations

Most people extract and retain more information from visual presentations
than from written or spoken prose (Dale 1969), while most language
instruction is verbal, involving predominantly lectures, writing in texts and
on chalkboards, and audiotapes in language laboratories.
VISUAL AND VERBAL LEARNERS                                                  (CONTINUED)


                                                          SEEING
                                                         HEARING
                  HUMAN SENSES                          TOUCHING
                                                         TESTING
                                                        SMELLING

                                                          VISUAL
               SENSORY MODALITIES                       AUDITORY
                                                        KINESTETIC



    KINESTETIC does not properly belong on a list of sensory input modalities.

                 KOLB (1984)                       LAWRENCE (1993)



           ACTIVE / REFLECTIVE                 EXTRAVERT / INTROVERT
VISUAL AND VERBAL LEARNERS                        (CONTINUED)



         The challenge to language instructors

To devise ways of augmenting their verbal classroom
presentation with nonverbal visual material:



Showing photographs,           Using
drawings, sketches, and        films, videotapes, and
cartoons to reinforce          dramatizations to illustrate
presentation of vocabulary     lessons in dialogue and
words                          pronunciation.
ACTIVE AND REFLECTIVE LEARNERS
  The complex mental processes by which perceived information is
  converted into knowledge. (Kolb 1984).


  (1) Active experimentation      (2) Reflective observation


   involves doing something        involves examining and
   in the external world with      manipulating the
   the information—                information introspectively.
   discussing it or explaining
   it or testing it in some
   way.
Language classes in which all
students are relegated to passive
roles, listening to and observing
the instructor and taking notes, do
little to promote learning for either
active or reflective learners.
TEACHING STRATEGIES

Language classes should include a variety of

   active learning experiences, such as
    conversations, enactment of dialogues and
    minidramas, and team competitions, and

    reflective experiences, such as brief writing
    exercises and question formulation exercises.
TEACHING STRATEGIES (CONTINUED)
   Small-group exercises can be extremely effective for
    both active and reflective learners.
   Five minutes of group work in a 50-minute period can
    be enough to maintain the students‟ attention for the
    entire class.
   Pose a question or problem (“Translate this
    sentence.” “What‟s wrong with what I just wrote?”
    “How many synonyms for „happy‟ can you think of in
    30 seconds?” “What question do you have about
    what we covered today?”) and have students come
    up with answers working in groups of three, with one
    group member acting as recorder.
SEQUENTIAL AND GLOBAL LEARNERS
   Sequential learners absorb information and acquire
    understanding of material in small connected
    chunks.

   Sequential learners can function with incomplete
    understanding of course material, but they may
    lack a grasp of the broad context of a body of
    knowledge and its interrelationships with other
    subjects and disciplines.
SEQUENTIAL AND GLOBAL LEARNERS           (CONTINUED)



   Global learners take in information in
    seemingly unconnected fragments and
    achieve understanding in large holistic leaps.

   Strongly global learners may appear slow
    and do poorly on homework and tests until
    they grasp the total picture, but once they
    have it they can often see connections that
    escape sequential learners.
SEQUENTIAL AND GLOBAL LEARNERS (CONTINUED)

Various terms have been used to describe categories
that appear to have points in common with the
sequential and global categories:
 Analytic and global (Kirby 1988; Schmeck 1988);
 Field-independent and field-dependent (Witkin &
  Goodenough 1981);
 Serialistic and holistic (Pask 1988);
 Left-brained and right-brained (Kane 1984);
 Atomistic and holistic (Marton 1988);
 Sequential and random (Gregorc 1982).
INDUCTIVE AND DEDUCTIVE LEARNERS

      In inductive presentation                   Students infer governing or
      one makes observations,                     correlating principles.
      measurements, data.



      In deductive presentation                   Students deduce
      one starts with                             consequences, and
      axioms, principles, or rules                formulate applications.




    Students may prefer deductive presentation because of its relatively high
    level of structure.


   A large percentage of classroom teaching in every subject is primarily or
   exclusively deductive, probably because deduction is an efficient and
   elegant way to organize and present material that is already understood.
DISTINCTION BETWEEN LANGUAGE ACQUISITION AND LEARNING.

                         Language Acquisition

        Acquisition is an inductive process. To acquire a language
        means:
         To pick it up gradually,
         To gain the ability to communicate without necessarily being
         able to articulate the rules.
         To absorb what they can from the abundant and continuous
         input.
         To gain in their ability to transfer strategies, make
         assumptions about the new language system, formulate and
         test rules.


                             Language Learning.

        Language learning is a largely conscious process that
        involves formal exposure to rules of syntax and semantics
        followed by specific applications of the rules, with corrective
        feedback reinforcing correct usage and discouraging incorrect
        usage. The flow of the learning process from general to specific
        suggests its characterization as a deductive process.
A MULTISTYLE APPROACH TO FOREIGN LANGUAGE EDUCATION
    Students learn more when information is presented in a variety of modes than when
    only a single mode is used.




 “Active Learning Strategies, Classroom Innovations, and One-Minute Motivators”
 Retrieved from http://community.tncc.edu/faculty/dollieslager/rcte/ESCCAcademy.html
INSTRUCTIONAL TECHNIQUES
Teach new material (vocabulary, rules of grammar) in the
context (intuitive, global, inductive).
Use photographs, drawings, sketches, and cartoons to
illustrate and reinforce the meanings of vocabulary
words. Show films, videotapes, and live dramatizations to
illustrate lessons in texts (visual, global.)
Assign some repetitive drill exercises to provide practice
in basic vocabulary and grammar (sensing) but don’t
overdo it (intuitive).
Provide intervals—however brief—for students to think
about what they have been told; assign brief writing
exercises (reflective).
Raise questions and problems to be worked on by
students in small groups; enact dialogues and mini-
dramas; hold team competitions (active).
Give students the option of cooperating on at least some
homework assignments (active).Active learners generally
learn best when they interact with others.
Balance inductive and deductive presentation of course
material.
REFERENCE

Learning and Teaching Styles In Foreign and Second Language
Education
Richard M Felder, North Carolina State University
Eunice R. Henriques, Universidade Estadual de Sao Paulo
Foreign Language Annals, 28, No. 1,1995, pp. 21–31

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Learning styles project

  • 1. LEARNING STYLES December 14th, 2011 Prepared by Luis Machado /Ecuador Learning and Teaching Styles In Foreign and Second Language Education Richard M Felder, North Carolina State University Eunice R. Henriques, Universidade Estadual de Sao Paulo Foreign Language Annals, 28, No. 1,1995, pp. 21–31
  • 3. LEARNING STYLE, A DEFINITION The ways in which an individual characteristically acquires, retains, and retrieves information are collectively termed the individual’s learning style.
  • 4. HOW DO STUDENTS LEARN?  By seeing and hearing;  Reflecting and acting;  Reasoning logically and intuitively;  Memorizing and visualizing.
  • 5. TEACHING METHODS Some instructors  Lecture,  Demonstrate or discuss;  Focus on rules and others on examples;  Emphasize memory and others understanding.
  • 6. CONDITIONS FOR STUDENT’S LEARNING  Student’s native ability;  His/her prior preparation;  The compatibility of his or her characteristic approach to learning; and  The instructor’s characteristic approach to teaching.
  • 7. POTENTIAL CONSEQUENCES Students’ Instructors’ Learning mismatch Teaching Styles Styles Tend to be bored in class (What is worse) Inattentive in class May become overly critical of Do poorly on tests their students Get discouraged about the Begin to question their own course competence as teachers. Give up the course
  • 8. DIMENSIONS OF LEARNING STYLE  Sensing and Intuitive Learners  Visual and Verbal Learners  Active and Reflective Learners  Sequential and Global Learners  Inductive and Deductive Learners
  • 9. SENSING AND INTUITIVE LEARNERS Two ways in which people tend to perceive the world: sensation and intuition. Jung (1971). Sensors Intuitors Concrete and methodical. Abstract and imaginative. Use facts, data, and experimentation. Use principles, concepts, and theories. Patient with detail but do not like Bored by detail and welcome complications. complications. Rely on memorization. Like variety, dislike repetition. Careful but may be slow. Quick but may be careless. Comfortable when learning and Tend to be better equipped to following rules and standard accommodate new concepts and procedures. exceptions to rules. Involve observing, gathering data Involve indirect perception by way of through the senses. the subconscious— accessing memory, speculating, imagining.
  • 10. EHRMAN AND OXFORD (1990) STUDY ON LEARNING STRATEGIES AND TEACHING APPROACHES PREFERRED BY SENSORS AND INTUITORS IN AN INTENSIVE LANGUAGE TRAINING PROGRAM Sensors Intuitors Used a variety of memorization Preferred teaching approaches strategies (internal drills and that involved greater flash cards) complexity and variety Liked practical class material Tended to be bored with drills. Liked highly structured and Better able to learn well organized classes with independently of the clear goals and milestones for instructor’s teaching style. achievement.
  • 11. VISUAL AND VERBAL LEARNERS Visual Learners Verbal Learners Learn through Pictures Diagrams Flow Charts Spoken Explanations Mind maps Written Explanations Films Demonstrations Most people extract and retain more information from visual presentations than from written or spoken prose (Dale 1969), while most language instruction is verbal, involving predominantly lectures, writing in texts and on chalkboards, and audiotapes in language laboratories.
  • 12. VISUAL AND VERBAL LEARNERS (CONTINUED) SEEING HEARING HUMAN SENSES TOUCHING TESTING SMELLING VISUAL SENSORY MODALITIES AUDITORY KINESTETIC KINESTETIC does not properly belong on a list of sensory input modalities. KOLB (1984) LAWRENCE (1993) ACTIVE / REFLECTIVE EXTRAVERT / INTROVERT
  • 13. VISUAL AND VERBAL LEARNERS (CONTINUED) The challenge to language instructors To devise ways of augmenting their verbal classroom presentation with nonverbal visual material: Showing photographs, Using drawings, sketches, and films, videotapes, and cartoons to reinforce dramatizations to illustrate presentation of vocabulary lessons in dialogue and words pronunciation.
  • 14. ACTIVE AND REFLECTIVE LEARNERS The complex mental processes by which perceived information is converted into knowledge. (Kolb 1984). (1) Active experimentation (2) Reflective observation involves doing something involves examining and in the external world with manipulating the the information— information introspectively. discussing it or explaining it or testing it in some way.
  • 15. Language classes in which all students are relegated to passive roles, listening to and observing the instructor and taking notes, do little to promote learning for either active or reflective learners.
  • 16. TEACHING STRATEGIES Language classes should include a variety of  active learning experiences, such as conversations, enactment of dialogues and minidramas, and team competitions, and  reflective experiences, such as brief writing exercises and question formulation exercises.
  • 17. TEACHING STRATEGIES (CONTINUED)  Small-group exercises can be extremely effective for both active and reflective learners.  Five minutes of group work in a 50-minute period can be enough to maintain the students‟ attention for the entire class.  Pose a question or problem (“Translate this sentence.” “What‟s wrong with what I just wrote?” “How many synonyms for „happy‟ can you think of in 30 seconds?” “What question do you have about what we covered today?”) and have students come up with answers working in groups of three, with one group member acting as recorder.
  • 18. SEQUENTIAL AND GLOBAL LEARNERS  Sequential learners absorb information and acquire understanding of material in small connected chunks.  Sequential learners can function with incomplete understanding of course material, but they may lack a grasp of the broad context of a body of knowledge and its interrelationships with other subjects and disciplines.
  • 19. SEQUENTIAL AND GLOBAL LEARNERS (CONTINUED)  Global learners take in information in seemingly unconnected fragments and achieve understanding in large holistic leaps.  Strongly global learners may appear slow and do poorly on homework and tests until they grasp the total picture, but once they have it they can often see connections that escape sequential learners.
  • 20. SEQUENTIAL AND GLOBAL LEARNERS (CONTINUED) Various terms have been used to describe categories that appear to have points in common with the sequential and global categories:  Analytic and global (Kirby 1988; Schmeck 1988);  Field-independent and field-dependent (Witkin & Goodenough 1981);  Serialistic and holistic (Pask 1988);  Left-brained and right-brained (Kane 1984);  Atomistic and holistic (Marton 1988);  Sequential and random (Gregorc 1982).
  • 21. INDUCTIVE AND DEDUCTIVE LEARNERS In inductive presentation Students infer governing or one makes observations, correlating principles. measurements, data. In deductive presentation Students deduce one starts with consequences, and axioms, principles, or rules formulate applications. Students may prefer deductive presentation because of its relatively high level of structure. A large percentage of classroom teaching in every subject is primarily or exclusively deductive, probably because deduction is an efficient and elegant way to organize and present material that is already understood.
  • 22. DISTINCTION BETWEEN LANGUAGE ACQUISITION AND LEARNING. Language Acquisition Acquisition is an inductive process. To acquire a language means: To pick it up gradually, To gain the ability to communicate without necessarily being able to articulate the rules. To absorb what they can from the abundant and continuous input. To gain in their ability to transfer strategies, make assumptions about the new language system, formulate and test rules. Language Learning. Language learning is a largely conscious process that involves formal exposure to rules of syntax and semantics followed by specific applications of the rules, with corrective feedback reinforcing correct usage and discouraging incorrect usage. The flow of the learning process from general to specific suggests its characterization as a deductive process.
  • 23. A MULTISTYLE APPROACH TO FOREIGN LANGUAGE EDUCATION Students learn more when information is presented in a variety of modes than when only a single mode is used. “Active Learning Strategies, Classroom Innovations, and One-Minute Motivators” Retrieved from http://community.tncc.edu/faculty/dollieslager/rcte/ESCCAcademy.html
  • 24. INSTRUCTIONAL TECHNIQUES Teach new material (vocabulary, rules of grammar) in the context (intuitive, global, inductive). Use photographs, drawings, sketches, and cartoons to illustrate and reinforce the meanings of vocabulary words. Show films, videotapes, and live dramatizations to illustrate lessons in texts (visual, global.) Assign some repetitive drill exercises to provide practice in basic vocabulary and grammar (sensing) but don’t overdo it (intuitive). Provide intervals—however brief—for students to think about what they have been told; assign brief writing exercises (reflective). Raise questions and problems to be worked on by students in small groups; enact dialogues and mini- dramas; hold team competitions (active). Give students the option of cooperating on at least some homework assignments (active).Active learners generally learn best when they interact with others. Balance inductive and deductive presentation of course material.
  • 25. REFERENCE Learning and Teaching Styles In Foreign and Second Language Education Richard M Felder, North Carolina State University Eunice R. Henriques, Universidade Estadual de Sao Paulo Foreign Language Annals, 28, No. 1,1995, pp. 21–31