Learning style: Difference between revisions

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traits which are said to form learning styles.}} (Coffield, Moseley, Hall and Ecclestone, 2004)
traits which are said to form learning styles.}} (Coffield, Moseley, Hall and Ecclestone, 2004)


According to critical reports like Coffield, Moseley, Hall and Ecclestone (2004), many models popular with practicionners to not meet academic standards on the grounds of dubious methodology.
According to critical reports like Coffield, Moseley, Hall and Ecclestone (2004), many models popular with practicionners do not meet academic standards.
Many learning style models seem to have rather weak academic foundations at worst or do not provide reliable measurement instruments at best.  
Many learning style models seem to have rather weak academic foundations and are grounded on dubious methodology at worst or do not provide reliable measurement instruments at best.


== Kinds of learning style research and practise ==
== Kinds of learning style research and practise ==

Revision as of 19:43, 24 August 2006

Definition

According to Wikipedia: “Learning styles are different ways that a person can learn. It's commonly believed that most people favor some particular method of interacting with, taking in, and processing stimuli or information. Psychologists have proposed several complementary taxonomies of learning styles. But other psychologists and neuroscientists have questioned the scientific basis for some learning style theories. A major report published in 2004 cast doubt on most of the main tests used to identify an individual's learning style.”

Here are a few definitions found in Internet glossaries:

  • The manner in which a learner perceives, interacts with, and responds to the learning environment. Components of learning style are the cognitive, affective and physiological elements, all of which may be strongly influenced by a person's cultural background. [1]
  • A preferential mode, through which a subject likes to master learning, solve problems, thinks or simply react in a pedagogical situation. [2]
  • A consistent pattern of behavior and performance by which an individual approaches educational experiences; learning style is derived from cultural socialization and individual personality as well as from the broader influence of human development. [3]
  • Learning styles can be defined as a set of cognitive, emotional, characteristic and physiological factors that serve as relatively stable indicators of how a learner perceives, interacts with, and responds to the learning environment (Keefe, 1979) according to [4]

Foundations

Learning style research is related to research on cognitive styles, interaction styles, brain science, etc.

“Conflicting assumptions about learning underpin mainstream ideas about learning and the best-known models of learning styles. For example, some theories discussed in this report derive from research into brain functioning, where claims are made that specific neural activity related to learning can be identified in different areas of the brain. Other influential ideas derive from established psychological theories, such as personality traits, intellectual abilities and fixed traits which are said to form learning styles.” (Coffield, Moseley, Hall and Ecclestone, 2004)

According to critical reports like Coffield, Moseley, Hall and Ecclestone (2004), many models popular with practicionners do not meet academic standards. Many learning style models seem to have rather weak academic foundations and are grounded on dubious methodology at worst or do not provide reliable measurement instruments at best.

Kinds of learning style research and practise

There are many learning style models, e.g. Coffield et al. (2004) reviewed over 800 texts and studied 13 models in depth. The authors of this critical report identify five major families:

  1. Constitutionally-based learning styles and preferences
    • These models claim that styles are fixed or at least difficult to change. “To defend these beliefs, theorists refer to genetically influenced personality traits, or to the dominance of particular sensory or perceptual channels, or to the dominance of certain functions linked with the left or right halves of the brain.” (Coffield et al., 2004: 22)
  2. Cognitive structure
    • These models see learning styles as structural properties of the cognitive system itself and deeply embedded in personality structure.
  3. Stable personality type
    • “The instruments and models grouped in this family have a common focus upon learning style as one part of the observable expression of a relatively stable personality type, a theory primarily influenced by the work of Jung [..] the theorists in this family are concerned with constructing instruments which embed learning styles within an understanding of the personality traits that shape all aspects of an individual\u2019s interaction with the world.” (Coffield et al., 2004: 55)
    • Example: Myers-Briggs
  4. Flexibly stable learning preferences
    • “For Kolb and for those who have followed in his tradition, a learning style is not a fixed trait, but 'a differential preference for learning, which changes slightly from situation to situation. At the same time, there is some long-term stability in learning style' (2000, 8).” (Coffield et al., 2004: 69)
    • Other example: Honey and Mumford.
  5. Learning approaches and strategies.
    • “During the 1970s, a body of research on learning explored a holistic, active view of approaches and strategies - as opposed to styles - that takes into account the effects of previous experiences and contextual influences. This body of work has been led for over 25 years in the UK by Noel Entwistle at the University of Edinburgh.” (Coffield et al., 2004: 99)

There are other attemps to categorize various learning style models:

McLoughlin (1991), provides a definition table of similar terms relating to learning styles

TermExplanation
Learning preferencefavouring one method of teaching over another
Learning strategyadopting a plan action in the acquisition of knowledge, skills or attitudes
Learning styleadopting a habitual and distinct mode of acquiring knowledge
Cognitive strategyadopting a plan of action in the process of organising and processing information
Cognitive stylea systematic and habitual mode of organising and processing information

Acharaya (2002)suggests that many theories of learning styles can be condensed and examined in four dimensions as follows:

  1. Personality of the Learners
    • Field dependence/independence, i.e. some look at patterns or relationships between parts first before looking at the at a whole picture / some look at the whole picture first and isolate or break it down into smaller parts after (Witkin & Goodenough, 1981)
    • Impulsive vs. reflective learners, i.e. quick response vs. thinking before acting (Schmeck, 1988)
  2. Information Processing
    • Cognitive styles, i.e. typical modes of perceiving, thinking, remembering, and problem-solving (see Kolb)
    • How people construct their views (related to the way he uses metacognition / learning strategy (Deci, Vallerand, Pellertier & Ryan, 1991).
  3. Social and Situational Interaction Among Learners
    • E.g. independent/dependent, collaborative/competitive, and participant/avoidant (Reichmann and Grasha, 1974)
  4. Instructional Methods

Santally and Senteni (2005) list the following Criteria

  • Cognitive Styles
    • Information Organizing (Serial/holist)
    • Information Gathering (Visual-Auditory-Kinaesthetic)
  • Cognitive Controls
    • Field dependence/independence
    • Cognitive Flexibility v/s Cognitive Constriction
  • Learning Style preferences
    • E.g. the Honey & Mumford model

Curry (1987, 1993), categorized different research approaches with an onion metaphor

  1. Cognitive personality style: most stable and therefore less easily modified
  2. Information processing style: the way new learning is used
  3. Instructional preferences: least stable: the way to gain knowledge

To conclude (provisionnaly) we think that an educational technologist should make a distinction between (1) models that are based on serious research on personality differences (including "stable" cognitive styles), (2) models that describe behavior patterns and subjective preferrences that can be measured in a given educational context and are often related to intention and motivation, and (3) models popular with practitioners that allow to think about pedagogic strategies and that are somehow related to various learning levels and learning types

Felder-Silverman Learning Style Model

The Felder-Silverman model is quite popular in engineering education. According to Felder (1996, 1993, ..) this model classifies students along the following dimensions:

  1. What type of information does the student preferentially perceive :
    • sensing learners (concrete, practical, oriented toward facts and procedures) or
    • intuitive learners (conceptual, innovative, oriented toward theories and meanings);
  2. Through which modality is sensory information most effectively perceived:
    • visual learners (prefer visual representations of presented material--pictures, diagrams, flow charts) or
    • verbal learners (prefer written and spoken explanations);
  3. With which organization of information is the student most comfortable ?
    • inductive learners (prefer presentations that proceed from the specific to the general) or
    • deductive learners (prefer presentations that go from the general to the specific);
  4. How does the student prefer to process information ?
    • active learners (learn by trying things out, working with others) or
    • reflective learners (learn by thinking things through, working alone);
  5. How does the student progress toward understanding ?
    • sequential learners (linear, orderly, learn in small incremental steps) or
    • global learners (holistic, systems thinkers, learn in large leaps).

Kolb's learning styles

David Kolb's taxonomy is grounded in his experiential learning theory and it is based on the idea that a given learning style is shaped by the transaction between people and their environment (e.g. education, career, job role). According to Susan Santo [5], Kolb states that learners have two preferred ways to deal with information:

  1. Concreteness or Abstractness
  2. Activity or Reflection

However, Kolb also states that the learning process itself always engages these 4 components in a cyclical fashion.

  1. Events we are involved with (concreteness)
  2. .. lead to reflection and information collection (reflexion)
  3. .. that let us develop ideas (abstractness)
  4. .. that lead to decisions that in turn create events (activity)

To each of these four steps of the learning process we can associated four learning modes:

  1. Concrete Experience (CE) - learning by feeling (involvement in an experience)
  2. Reflective Observation (RO) - learning by reflection, watching, and listening
  3. Abstract Conceptualization (AC) - learning by thinking
  4. Active Experimentation (AE) - learning by doing

In other words, he argues that all people apply these four processes but some people tend to engage in some learning modes more than in others.

His learning styles typology [6] is based on a combination of these learning modes according to 2 dimensions

  1. Abstract conceptualization (thinking, AC) vs. concrete experience (experiencing, CE)
  2. Reflective Observation (reflecting, RO) vs. active experimentation (doing, AE)

Or to look at it in another way: they prefer either steps 1-2, 2-3, 3-4 or 4-1.

This leads to four types of learning style preference:

  • Diverging: combines preferences for experiencing (CE) and reflecting (RO)
  • Assimilating: combines preferences for reflecting (AC) and thinking (RO)
  • Converging: combines preferences for thinking (AC) and doing (AE)
  • Accommodating: combines preferences for doing (AE) and experiencing (CE)

The figure summarizes: Kolb-learning-style.png

Honey and Mumford's Typology of Learners

Based on Kolb's (1982) experiential learning model, Honey and Mumford proposed a similar categorization of individual learning styles and which seems to be popular in management education:

  1. Activists, prefer to act and are well equipped to experiment (experiencing)
  2. Reflectors, prefer to study data and are well equipped to review (reviewing)
  3. Theorists, need to tidy up and have answers, are well equipped for concluding (concluding)
  4. Pragmatists, like things practical, are well equipped for planning (planning)

According to various practionners' websites (e.g. [7] [8] [9] ) there are important consequences for instructional designers:

  • Activists:
    • learn best when: they can immediately do something, when they are exposed to new experiences and problems, work with others in task teams
    • learn least when: they have to listen to long explanations, absorb a lot of data, follow precise instructions, read, write and think a lot on their own, ...
    • Pedagogical activities: brainstorms, problem solving, group discussions, role plays, competitions, etc.
  • Reflectors:
    • learn best when: they can observe, review and think about what is happening
    • learn least when: they are rushed, have to act as leaders,
    • Pedagogical activities: observing activities, paired discussions, coached activities, questionnaires, interviews, ...
  • Theorists:
    • learn best when: they can study theories, models, concepts, stories etc. behind, they can ask questions and engage in analysis and synthesis.
    • learn least when: the activity is ill structured, no principles are taught, ...
    • Pedagogical activities: Provide models, background information, ...
  • Pragmatists
    • learn best when: they can apply new information to a real world problem, etc.
    • learn least when: "everything is theory", the isn't an immediate benefit, etc.
    • Pedagogical activities: Case studies, discussion, problem solving

Myers-Briggs (MBTI)

According to Felder (1996), this model classifies students according to their preferences on scales derived from psychologist Carl Jung's theory of psychological types. Students may be:

  1. Extraverts (try things out, focus on the outer world of people) or introverts (think things through, focus on the inner world of ideas);
  2. Sensors (practical, detail-oriented, focus on facts and procedures) or intuitors (imaginative, concept-oriented, focus on meanings and possibilities);
  3. Thinkers (skeptical, tend to make decisions based on logic and rules) or feelers (appreciative, tend to make decisions based on personal and humanistic considerations);
  4. Judgers (set and follow agendas, seek closure even with incomplete data) or perceivers (adapt to changing circumstances, resist closure to obtain more data).

The MBTI type preferences can be combined to form 16 different learning style types. For example, one student may be an ESTJ (extravert, sensor, thinker, perceiver) and another may be an INFJ (introvert, intuitor, feeler, judger).

Myer-Briggs types do have similar practical implications for education to the Honey-Mumford approach.

Jonassen and Grabowski

Jonassen and Grabowski provide the following criteria - grouped in two families - to identify a learning style.

Cognitive Styles
Information Gathering
  1. Visual / Haptic
  2. Visualiser / Verbaliser: preference for either graphics, diagrams, illustrations or words
  3. Levelling / Sharpening:
Cognitive Styles
Information Organising
  1. Serialist / Holist
  2. Conceptual Style (Analytical / Relational)

These authors base their work on several theories, including the popular visual/verbal distinction that we will address in the multimedia articles.

Entwistle

Draft

Entwistle is known for a relatively clear concept of quality distinction in student learning styles. According to Mockford & Denton (1998) the model distinguishes three styles strongly related to students' intentions, each of which can be dominant:

  • Deep learning: based on high levels of intrinsic motivation, pursuing new ideas and materials through a variety of strategies in the search for understanding. This is a powerful way of learning, but does not necessarily lead to best grades.
  • Surface apathetic: students put in a minimal effort and focus on assessment requirements.
  • Deep, non-apathetic (strategic): students focus on the product of learning rather than the process and the achievement of high grade.

“If students move towards surface and strategic learning styles in reaction to assessment systems, there can be a degradation in the learning experience. Opportunities for creative thinking can be reduced or even lost if the focus of learning moves towards assessment and attainment is measured only against stated performance criteria. What can emerge is a student who seeks to please staff by judging what is the preferred design style or practical outcome required. In this learning framework students are unlikely to engage their minds deeply in an active, yet considered, reflective exploration for new ways of doing things: they will stay within the guidelines of what output is required to satisfy the instructor and the stated assessment criteria. In the search for more effective design and technology teaching, assessment strategies that encourage students towards the opposite of this characteristic, namely a deep approach to learning, can offer considerable gains in learning.” (Mockford & Denton , 1998)

In later research, Entwistle also created more sophisticated constructs. E.g. in honor of Gordon Pask's contribution to higher education he presented in 1991 a model that combine students intentions with their dominant learning approach / style.

table in png format (Access restricted) ?


A earlier Typology (??)
  • Non-committers (cautious, anxious, disinclined to take risks)
  • Hustlers (competitive, dynamic, but insensitive)
  • Plungers (emotional, impulsive and individualistic).
  • Reasonable adventurers who combines curiosity and the ability to be critical and reflective

General implications for instructional design

The literature on learning styles suggests that an instructional design should look at several issues related to cognitive styles, learning styles, etc.

  • When to use examples and practice vs. exposure to theory
  • Levels and mixture of concreteness/abstraction or visual/verbal etc. in learning materials and lecturing.
  • Various forms of collaboration and cooperation between students
  • Level of learner control (related to their learning strategies and metacognitive abilities and the question on how to favor higher order learning)

As for the general value regarding learning style models, Merril (2002) argues that “Learning style is secondary in selecting the fundamental components of instructional strategy appropriate for and consistent with a given learning goal. However, learning style should be considered in selecting instructional style and adjusting the parameters of a given instructional strategy.”. His bottom line is that “Appropriate, consistent instructional strategies are determined first on the basis of the type of content to be taught or the goals of the instruction (the content-by-strategy interactions) and secondarily, learner style determines the value of the parameters that adjust or fine-tune these fundamental learning strategies (learning-style-by-strategy interactions). Finally, content-by-strategy interactions take precedence over learning-style-by-strategy interactions regardless of the instructional style or philosophy of the instructional situation.”

As an example on how to take into account learning styles, Merril (2002) presents some possible learning-style-by-strategy interactions. However, he insists that each type of learner always should engage with various strategies and content types.

  • Content sequence. Cognitive-restricted and serialist learners learn better from content arranged in a logical sequence and prefer to learn each topic in order. Cognitive-flexible or holist learners learn better when they are able to select which topic to study next and to review each topic to get a whole picture before studying each topic in detail. Note however, that when the detail study comes each type of learner must engage in the instructional strategy that is appropriate for and consistent with the instructional goal. (Merril, 2002:3)
  • Transaction Sequence. Holist learners prefer an inductive-sequence where they are presented examples and demonstrations first prior to figuring out a definition or seeing the steps listed. Serialist learners prefer a deductive-sequence where they see the definition or list of steps first prior to seeing examples or a demonstration. Nevertheless, both the inductive and deductive sequence of transaction components must still contain all the components of the appropriate and consistent strategy or there will be a decrement in learning. (Merril, 2002:3)

Transaction Configuration. Instruction is characterized by the representation of the content information included and by the addition of information, directions, and learner guidance that enhances the students ability to acquire the information presented. It is in the area of learner guidance where learning-style-by-strategy interactions may also play a significant role. Visual learners learn best when information is presented in graphic form. Verbal learners prefer textual presentations or lectures. Haptic learners prefer information they can manipulate. Nevertheless visual, verbal or haptic learners must still have all the components of an appropriate and consistent instructional strategy even though these components may have different forms of representation. (Merril, 2002:3)

Concept Instruction. In learning a concept all learners need to see examples and non-examples. However, holist learners tend to have a problem with undergeneralization, they need to see more divergent examples to promote generalization. Serialist learners tend to have a problem with overgeneralization, they need to see more matched example non-example pairs to facilitate their ability to discriminate among examples and non-examples. Both of these types of learners need examples and nonexamples as these are essential components of a concept instruction strategy. However, each type of learner requires a different emphasis in the relationships among these instances. (Merril, 2002:3)

Felder (1996) argues in a similar direction: “A learning style model is useful if balancing instruction on each of the model dimensions meets the learning needs of essentially all students in a class. [...] Which model educators choose is almost immaterial, since the instructional approaches that teach around the cycle for each of the models are essentially identical.” In other words, a good pedagogical design includes several strategies to present information and engages students in different kinds of information processing. Felder (1996) then presents a list of strategies that ensure that a course appeals to a wide range of learning styles. These suggestions are based on the Felder-Silverman model. See the Felder design model.

According to Becta, also Sadler-Smith and Smith (2004) offer the following recommendations for accommodating learners' cognitive styles:

  • give a structured route through learning
  • provide a global perspective of the content
  • present information both visually and verbally (written or spoken)
  • make the structure and scope of content, as well as its relationship to other topic areas, as explicit as possible

Entwistle (1991) argues that teachers should: take account of the range of learning styles their students will inevitably exhibit, recognise that their own learning style is likely to be reflected in their teaching and acknowledge the dangers of allowing one particular approach to teaching to exclude the voice of others.

On the opposite of the few authors we reviewed, some researchers in fields like Adaptive hypertext seem to claim that different learning modes and learning path should be proposed to each learning. Such an appoach:

  • is very costly
  • may inhibit to large extent most sorts of collaborative learning (which does seem to have a positive effect on learning outcomes)
  • may be counter-productive, since every learner should at some point be able to deal with differents sorts of input and he also should be trained to produce knowledge and output requiring a wide range of cognitive processing.
  • may lead to "labelling", i.e. confine students to initial behavior patterns as show or perceived by an instructor (like "this person can never grasp the principle behind a word processor and can only repeat demonstrated procedures").
Note: This article is first attempt to map out the topic. The initial author (DSchneider 20:37, 24 August 2006 (MEST)) is not too motivated to engage much more ...

Links

Tests & practical stuff

The Index of Learning Styles (ILS)
  • The Index of Learning Styles instrument was developed by Richard M. Felder and Barbara A. Solomon of North Carolina State University.

Felder and Spurlin (2005) suggest these principal applications for the ILS:

  1. The first is to provide guidance to instructors on the diversity of learning styles within their student population and to help them design instruction appropriately
  2. The second is to provide insight to students into their possible learning strengths and weaknesses.
Others

References

  • Acharya, Chandrama (2002), Students' Learning Styles and Their Implications for Teachers, CDTL Brief, September 2002, Vol. 5 No. 6 HTML
  • Atherton, J.S. (2005) Learning and Teaching: Experiential Learning On-line UK: Accessed: 12 July 200
  • BECTA Report (2006), Learning styles - an introduction to the research PDF
  • Becker, D. and M. Dwyer, (1998). "The impact of student verbal/visual learning style preference on implementing groupware in the classroom," Journal of Asynchronous Learning Networks, volume 2, number 2 (September),HTML
  • Coffield, F., Moseley, D., Hall, E., Ecclestone, K. (2004). Learning styles and pedagogy in post-16 learning. A systematic and critical review. London: Learning and Skills Research Centre. PDF
  • Cornelius, Sarah, Learning Online: Models and Styles, Online Tutoring e-Book, OTIS (Heriot-Watt University and The Robert Gordon University). HTML
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