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LEARNING STYLES AND STRATEGIES IN THE MULTIMEDIA AGE

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Title: LEARNING STYLES AND STRATEGIES IN THE MULTIMEDIA AGE


1
LEARNING STYLES AND STRATEGIESIN THE
MULTIMEDIA AGE
  • Rebecca L. Oxford, Ph.D.
  • University of Maryland

2
LEARNING STYLES AND STRATEGIES
3
PURPOSE
  • To introduce main concepts and dimensions of
    learning styles and strategies in the multimedia
    age

4
WHAT HAS THE MULTIMEDIA AGE BROUGHT US?
  • Internet as a source of fast, at-our-fingertips
    information
  • E-mail, chat-rooms, and instant messaging
  • Reach out and touch someone!
  • . . . anyplace in the world

5
WHAT HAS THE MULTIMEDIA AGE BROUGHT US?
(Continued)
  • Hundreds of new L2 learning programs, some
    exciting and some not
  • Hypermedia the Latin example
  • New on-line projects for L2 strategy instruction

6
WHAT HAS THE MULTIMEDIA AGE BROUGHT US?
(Continued)
  • Electronic portfolios for students (and teachers)
  • Game-Boys, Nintendo, and Leapfrog
  • CNN video linked with the lessons in your
    textbooks

7
WHAT HAS THE MULTIMEDIA AGE BROUGHT US?
(Continued)
  • CDs, tapes, videos opening up new L2 practice
    possibilities
  • E-books, e-journals, and e-zines
  • Interactive simulations like ICONS and
    Create-a-Company

8
WHAT HAS THE MULTIMEDIA AGE BROUGHT US?
(Continued)
  • Shortened attention spans
  • Increased Internet-aided plagiarism
  • Easy ways to steal music, software, and other
    peoples writing

9
WHAT HAS THE MULTIMEDIA AGE BROUGHT US?
(Continued)
  • Concept of teacher as technology wizard
  • Comfort Your students will ALWAYS know more than
    you do about some things!
  • Teacher-student technology alliances
  • \

10
WHAT HAS THE MULTIMEDIA AGE BROUGHT US?
(Continued)
  • New ways of looking at learning and teaching
  • More attention paid to HOW PEOPLE LEARN (learning
    styles and learning strategies)

11
LEARNING STYLE CONCEPTS
  • Learning styles are the general, broad approaches
    a person uses to learn or to solve a problem.
  • Learning styles occur on a continuum. They are
    not black-and-white categories.

12
LEARNING STYLE CONCEPTS (CONTINUED)
  • Learning styles can be stretched by learning new
    strategies .
  • Learning styles are related to cultural
    background and beliefs.
  • Learning styles can change somewhat over the
    lifespan.

13
EXAMPLES OF LEARNING STYLES
  • Holistic and item-focused styles
  • Synthesizing and analyzing styles
  • Open and closure-oriented styles
  • Intuitive-random and concrete-sequential styles
  • Extroverted and introverted styles
  • Sensory preference styles

14
LEARNING STRATEGY CONCEPTS
  • Unlike learning styles, learning strategies are
    the specific thoughts, steps, or behaviors that
    learners consciously use to enhance the
    perception, storage, retention, and retrieval of
    new information.

15
LEARNING STRATEGY CONCEPTS (CONTINUED)
  • Learning strategies are intentional tools
    learners use to make their learning more
    efficient, more effective, and more enjoyable.
  • Many kinds of learning strategies exist. These
    are used for literacy and other areas of learning.

16
LEARNING STRATEGY CONCEPTS (CONTINUED)
  • Familiar strategy groupings include
  • Cognitive / Memory (outlining, highlighting,
    analyzing, synthesizing, semantic-mapping, using
    imagery to remember, and many more)
  • Metacognitive (planning, organizing, evaluating,
    and monitoring POEM)

17
LEARNING STRATEGY CONCEPTS (CONTINUED)
  • Familiar strategy groupings include
  • Compensation (guessing from the context, using
    gestures to convey meaning, and pausing for help
    in a conversation)
  • Affective (lowering anxiety through music or
    other means, rewarding yourself, making learning
    more fun)
  • Social (asking questions, learning with others,
    finding out about the target culture)

18
PULLING STYLES AND STRATEGIES TOGETHER
  • Holistic and item-focused styles
  • Synthesizing and analyzing styles
  • Open and closure-oriented styles
  • Intuitive-random and concrete-sequential styles
  • Extroverted and introverted styles
  • Sensory preference styles
  • HOW DO STRATEGIES RELATE TO STYLES?
  • HOW DO BOTH RELATE TO TECHNOLOGY?

19
HOLISTIC AND ITEM-FOCUSED STYLES
  • The holistic style prefers big ideas and few
    details can guess or predict easily, though not
    particularly accurately may use all-or-nothing
    thinking often impulsive does not involve
    systematic, reflective synthesis.
  • The item-focused style prefers small pieces of
    information may be hyper-focused on details,
    though not interested in relationships between
    them does not involve systematic, reflective
    analysis.

20
HOLISTIC STYLE(RIGHT-BRAINED)
Personally, I like to look at the big picture.
21
SAMPLE STRATEGIES LINKED WITH THE HOLISTIC STYLE
  • Seek only a general impression of what is read or
    heard, without focusing well
  • Skim very fast for the main idea (may involve
    grabbing for the first concept encountered)
  • Look for / accept someone elses summary without
    asking if it is adequate
  • Guess randomly (desperately) from context or
    background knowledge

22
ITEM-FOCUSED STYLE(LEFT-BRAINED)
23
SAMPLE STRATEGIES LINKED WITH THE ITEM-FOCUSED
STYLE
  • Make lists of facts, ideas, or expressions
    without organizing or labeling them
  • Listen or read for details without attending to
    relative importance
  • Take detailed notes but without coherence
  • Ramble through the Internet picking up odds and
    ends
  • In a summary, list facts without regard to
    whats important

24
SYNTHESIZING AND ANALYZING STYLES
  • The synthesizing style prefers big ideas and few
    details, does not need total accuracy, can guess
    or predict easily, and seeks the main theme,
    based on systematic, reflective synthesis.
  • The analyzing style likes detailed information,
    precision, and accuracy does not prefer to guess
    unless relatively sure of being right seeks
    relationships between parts and part-to-whole,
    based on systematic, reflective analysis.

25
SYNTHESIZING STYLE (RIGHT-BRAINED)
26
SAMPLE STRATEGIES LINKED WITH THE SYNTHESIZING
STYLE
  • Integrate multiple strands into a written
    synthesis that reflects thoughtful priorities
  • Make a mind-map centered on a big idea (involves
    both synthesis and analysis)
  • Seek the main idea and double-check
  • Use Internet to search for all the big ideas
    related to TOPIC OR PERSON X

27
ANALYZING STYLE(LEFT-BRAINED)
Knowing how it could change the lives of canines
everywhere, the dog scientists struggled
diligently to understand the Doorknob Principle.
28
SAMPLE STRATEGIES LINKED WITHTHE ANALYZING STYLE
  • Seek relationships and priorities among facts or
    ideas found through multimedia
  • Create a flowchart indicating linkages
  • Make a mind-map centered on a big idea (involves
    both analysis and synthesis)
  • Break down an expression into parts to understand
    the meaning
  • Compare and contrast
  • Ask for evidence to support assertions

29
(No Transcript)
30
OPEN AND CLOSURE-ORIENTED STYLES
  • The open style thinks learning is a game,
    believes deadlines are ridiculous, and wants to
    keep taking in (perceiving) information. This
    is the MBTI Perceiving type.
  • The closure-oriented style likes decisions made
    rapidly, prefers clarity NOW, and actually
    prefers deadlines. This is the MBTI Judging type.

31
OPEN STYLE
32
SAMPLE STRATEGIESLINKED WITH THE OPEN STYLE
  • Make L2 learning a personal game
  • Put things off to take in more information on a
    topic (Procrastination can be based on interest,
    not just anxiety!)
  • Leave paper and e-files and folders all over,
    with personal meanings unknown to others but
    (perhaps) clear to you
  • Respond to urgent instructional demands when you
    can find no way out

33
CLOSURE-ORIENTED STYLE
34
SAMPLE STRATEGIESLINKED WITHTHE
CLOSURE-ORIENTED STYLE
  • Identify the purpose of a task and plan how to
    fulfill it
  • Organize your computer files or notebook
  • Put away materials not in use
  • Evaluate your work
  • Review in a widening spiral
  • Work toward deadlines
  • In cooperative learning, identify roles for each
    person and encourage productivity

35
INTUITIVE-RANDOM AND CONCRETE-SEQUENTIAL STYLES
  • The intuitive-random style thinks futuristically
    and abstractly, wants many options, wants freedom
    to make own rules, and avoids authority figures.
    This is the MBTI Intuitive type.
  • The concrete-sequential style focuses on todays
    task, learns step-by-step, and wants an authority
    figure to give the rules and directions. This is
    the MBTI Sensing type.

36
INTUITIVE-RANDOM STYLE
37
SAMPLE STRATEGIESLINKED WITHTHE
INTUITIVE-RANDOM STYLE
  • Brainstorm many current and future options
    Internet is perfect for this!
  • Create your own theories
  • Alter assignments for your own intellectual
    interests seek your own voice
  • Add new twists and multiple views
  • Judge your work by creative or theoretical value,
    not by linear rationality or conformity
  • Become your own authority

38
CONCRETE-SEQUENTIAL STYLE
39
SAMPLE STRATEGIESLINKED WITHTHE
CONCRETE-SEQUENTIAL STYLE
  • Ask the person in charge for the right way to
    do it
  • Ask for step-by-step instruction and feedback
  • Do a systematic search using multiple electronic
    data bases
  • Keep everyone on track
  • Look back to see whats accomplished and forward
    to see whats next

40
EXTROVERTED AND INTROVERTED STYLES
  • The extroverted style gets energy from other
    people and from lots of activities. This is the
    MBTI Extroverted type.
  • The introverted style gets energy from the
    internal world of ideas, thoughts, and feelings.
    This is the MBTI Introverted type.

41
EXTROVERTED STYLE
42
SAMPLE STRATEGIESLINKED WITHTHE EXTROVERTED
STYLE
  • Seek a learning buddy, peer reviewer, or
    conversation partner
  • Ask questions for clarification or verification
  • Set up a study group
  • Keep the e-mail hotline going!
  • Practice jointly for presentations or exams
  • Express your ideas, whether your know the
    audience or not
  • Exercise social skills (persuasion, small talk,
    asking personal questions) useful to create a
    learning community
  • Find out everybodys interests

43
INTROVERTED STYLE
44
SAMPLE STRATEGIESLINKED WITHTHE INTROVERTED
STYLE
  • Use a chat group or listserv that is relatively
    anonymous
  • Study by yourself or with one trusted friend
  • Choose independent tasks when possible
  • Write in a private journal that is not to be
    shared
  • Seek greater depth than breadth

45
SENSORY PREFERENCE STYLES
  • The visual style prefers to learn through the
    eye reading, computers, TV, bulletin boards
    needs written directions! Examples visual verbal
    style, visual spatial style, and visual pictorial
    style.
  • The auditory style prefers to learn thorough
    listening and/or talking. Examples auditory
    aural style and auditory oral style.
  • The hands-on style prefers to learn through touch
    or movement. Examples tactile style and
    kinesthetic style.

46
VISUAL VERBAL AND VISUAL SPATIAL STYLES
47
VISUAL PICTORIAL STYLE
48
SAMPLE STRATEGIESLINKED WITHTHE VISUAL STYLE
  • Use flowcharts, story grammars, T-lines
  • Use videos, movies, Internet , photos, pictures,
    books for visual stimulation
  • Read extensively
  • Exercise your fine visual memory
  • Remember material by where it is located
  • Create visual art to illustrate stories/ideas
  • Start a class newsletter

49
AUDITORY AURAL AND AUDITORY ORAL STYLES
50
SAMPLE STRATEGIESLINKED WITHTHE AUDITORY STYLE
  • Remember material by what it sounds like
  • Remember material by when you first heard it or
    by who said it aloud
  • Use rhyming, intonation, and background noise to
    remember (accessible through media)
  • Listen carefully to oral directions
  • Tape native speakers and imitate their
    pronunciation
  • Exercise your fine auditory memory
  • Remember by listening to yourself talk!

51
HANDS-ON (TACTILE AND KINESTHETIC) STYLE
52
SAMPLE STRATEGIESLINKED WITHTHE HANDS-ON STYLE
  • Build 3-dimensional models or dioramas of
    literary scenes
  • Label objects to remember their meanings
  • Play guessing games with objects or props
  • Participate in role-plays, skits, etc. that
    require movement or touch
  • Practice vocabulary or concepts while taking a
    leisurely walk (with your Walkman)
  • Rehearse or review while lifting weights at the
    gym
  • Use flash cards or other movement-related aids

53
WHERE WE HAVE BEEN
  • We have
  • Outlined major concepts of learning styles and
    strategies in the multimedia age.
  • Provided definitions and illustrations of key
    learning styles.
  • Listed sample strategies related to each style.
  • HOW CAN YOU USE THIS INFORMATION
  • TO TEACH MORE EFFECTIVELY?
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