Tuesday, September 27, 2016

Learning Styles



Before we talk about the curriculum used in this studio, let's talk about learning styles first.

It's obvious that people are born with different temperament and personality types. This affects our learning styles. In our studio, we believe that good teachers should be able to recognize students' learning styles to make sure learning is fun and effective.

The common learning styles are:

Auditory learners-people who learn the best by listening/sound

Visual learners-people who learn the best by seeing pictures, shapes, colors, or things written on paper, a whiteboard, etc.

Kinesthetic learners: people learn through physical experience. They have to touch or feel things, or even move around to have what they are learning registered in their mind.

Social learners: people who learn best from interaction with others. If you or your child understand a new concept the fastest by talking to the teacher or discussion with other fellow students, this is your major learning style.

Now this is just a rough classification. Of course there are many who learn best with two styles together, sometime one style being the dominant and the other style is just helping.

For example, colorful images seem to be the best way to get William's attention. He also likes to use blocks to learn math and drum pads/drum sticks to learn rhythm. But if you just explain a new concept to him by words, he gets lost easily. During classroom discussion, he would rather look at the raindrops and falling leaves outside the window. Guess what might be William's learning style(s)? Visual and kinesthetic. This is very common in boys.

Here is another example. Katie likes to talk. In her 4th grade classroom, she tends to engage the teacher or classmates in discussions. She understands and remembers what she learns better if she can talk about it. But sometimes the teacher would mistaken her desire to talk as interrupting the teaching. Obviously Katie is a social learner. And her teacher is probably a different type.

As we grow our brain matures and develops. We grow to become more adaptable to learning styles that we don't prefer. 

A knowledgeable teacher should be aware of his/her own learning style since this affects the teaching style tremendously. This awareness allows the teacher to go beyond his/her own natural inclination to help the students learn in effective ways. This can eliminate frustration and make the whole experience more fun.

After reading this post, we are ready to talk about our curriculum.
Coming soon, so stay tuned! ;-)





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