Answer: “Someone with a Visual learning style has a preference for seen or observed things, including pictures, diagrams, demonstrations, displays, handouts, films, flip-chart, etc. These people will use phrases such as ‘show me’, ‘let’s have a look at that’ and will be best able to perform a new task after reading the instructions or watching someone else do it first. These are the people who will work from lists and written directions and instructions.
Tips for Accommodating
Use maps, flow charts, or webs to organize materials
Highlight and color code books/notes to organize and relate material
Have students pick out key words and ideas in their own writing and highlight them in different colors to clearly reveal organizational patterns
Write out checklists of needed formulas, commonly misspelled words, etc.
Write out and use flash cards for review of material
Draw pictures or cartoons of concepts
Write down material on slips of paper and move them around into proper sequence. (Can be done on PC too)
Use the chalkboard (them and you) to note important information
If using the computer, have the student experiment with different font sizes and styles to enhance readability.
Auditory Learning Style
Characteristics
Someone with an Auditory learning style has a preference for the transfer of information through listening: to the spoken word, of self or others, of sounds and noises. These people will use phrases such as ‘tell me’, ‘let’s talk it over’ and will be best able to perform a new task after listening to instructions from an expert. These are the people who are happy being given spoken instructions over the telephone, and can remember all the words to songs that they hear!
Tips for Accommodating
Engage the student in conversation about the subject matter
Question students about the material
Ask for oral summaries of material
Have them tape lectures and review them with you
Have them tape themselves reviewing material and listen to it together
Read material aloud to them
Use a talking calculator
Have them put material to a rhythm or tune and rehearse it aloud
Kinesthetic or Tactile Learning Style
Characteristics
Someone with a Kinesthetic learning style has a preference for physical experience - touching, feeling, holding, doing, practical hands-on experiences. These people will use phrases such as ‘let me try’, ‘how do you feel?’ and will be best able to perform a new task by going ahead and trying it out, learning as they go. These are the people who like to experiment, hands-on, and never look at the instructions first!
Tips for Accommodating
Write out checklists of materials to be learned or looked for
Trace words and diagrams on paper
Use textured paper and experiment with different sizes of pens, pencils, and crayons to write down information
Use role play or dramatize concepts. Students can move objects around to dramatize a concept or act out the concept themselves.
Ask the student to envision a scene in which the material to be learned is being used or acted out somehow. For example: a student could imagine being a character in a novel.
Have the student take notes (on paper, word processor, in textbooks) while reading or listening.
Use some form of body movement (snapping fingers, pacing, mouthing ideas) while reciting material to be learned.”
Explanation: