3 research outputs found

    Survey of research on learning styles

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    A number of studies conducted during the last decade have found that students’ achievement increases when teaching methods match their learning styles—biological and developmental characteristics that affect how they learn

    Report of the New York State Board of Regents\u27 Panel on Learning Styles

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    This report comprises the results of a panel commissioned by the New York State Board of Regents to review the status of knowledge on learning styles and group tendencies in learning behavior. The panel commissioned background papers, and debated various aspects of learning style as they relate to education. Of particular note was the role of culture and learning style, cognition, multiple intelligence, left brain-right brain development, and environmental conditions. The panel also considered pedagogy, instructional strategy, school organization and administration, diversity and educational equality and equity, and educational policy and practice as each related to learning style and behavioral tendency. The deliberations of the panel were consistently framed in the historical and educational experience of African-American and Latino American children in particular, and people of racial, ethnic, linguistic, and cultural difference in general. Recommendations are provided to advise the Board of Regents on how it might address these issues. Commentary on the recommendations is provided by Edmund G. Wilson, the Chairperson of the panel. A review of the knowledge base by Brenda A. Allen is included. The bulk of this report is comprised of the following position papers: (1) Behavioral Style, Culture, and Teaching and Learning (Asa G. Hilliard III); (2) Learning Styles Dialogue (Bernice McCarthy and Marcus Lieberman); (3) Theories of Learning Styles, Neurosciences, Guided Imagery, Suggestopaedia, Multiple Intelligences and Integrative Learning (Laurence Dean Martel); and (4) Are Schools Responsible for Students\u27 Failure?: A Synthesis of the Research on Learning Styles (Rita Dunn, Jeffrey A. Beaudry, and Angela Klavas). Each of these reports includes an extensive list of references, and some of them use tables and figures to illustrate data

    Survey of Research on Learning Styles

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    Focuses on studies conducted in the U.S. on learning styles that have revealed the effect of environmental, emotional, sociological, physiological and cognitive preferences on students\u27 achievements. Correlational studies that were conducted to investigate connections between individual preferences and other influences on learning; Influence of physical activity of students on learning
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