Learning Styles in Adult EducationDr. Robert Ouellette 5/23/00 |
Background Information
The purpose of the current analysis is to review the role of learning styles and to assess their role in impacting on the performance of student. The study of instructor learning style was based on the premise that instructors teach, partially based on their own individual learning style.
The
hypotheses to be tested are as follows:
Students
cluster in definite learning style groups
Learning
style, which is fixed over a long period of time has a large impact on the
ability to learn effectively
Teaching
style (which is based on learning style) might be dissonant with student
learning style may lead to poor students and teacher performance
There are important gender, ethnic origin, and generational differences between students that affect their learning ability, style, and performance.
It is a tradition in most classes for the instructor to ask students to introduce themselves. In a face-to-face class it takes the form of a two-minute verbal summary and in an online class it takes the form of submitting a short bio. The purposes of this activity is to initiate the class socialization process and for the teacher to develop a better understanding of the background, interest and level of preparation of the student. This is wholly inadequate. Teachers should learn in detail what the students know about the subject matter. They need to ascertain what the students wish to know (outcomes) and how it is relevant to their life and work and how they learn best. The current analysis addresses this last question.
Protocol
The population under study is the students and instructors in the Technology Management Program (TMAN) at the University of Maryland University College in the Spring 2000. More than 1023 questionnaire (addressing age, gender, ethnic origin, gap in education between bachelor degree and master program, and attitudes) and test instruments (Gregorc, R. M. Felder, Long/Dziuban) were posted on the WebTycho site (for Internet-based classes) or where distributed to face-to-face students by their instructors. More than 400 (they are still trickling in) returns were received a return rate in excess of 40 percent. The analysis is based on 369 cases available at the time of the analysis. Additional data items (such as undergraduate GPA, cumulative graduate school GPA, number of WebTycho (WT) and face-to face (F2F) classes taken, major, track, etc. were obtained from the records. The same tests with a different questionnaire were also applied to the instructors.
An Excel database was created and upon quality control
and proper coding was imported into SPSS version 9 for analysis. In order to
improve the response rate of students and because I am a teacher first, I
promised and delivered to each student an individual report on their learning
style in the hope that they would use this information to improve their
effectiveness and performance. I find that
students, like all people being surveyed, consider time as their most
valuable asset and will willingly fill in questionnaires and take tests if they
receive something of value in return. In order to further improve the return
rate, all forms were designed using the form feature of Word such that
students only need to click on the appropriate box and e-mail the result to me
for online students or mark the appropriate box with a pencil for face-to-face
students. The letter addressed to
the student talkie advantage of marketing knowledge with permission marketing to
create an environment where the students would participate in this survey and
subsequent surveys.
Learning
styles
(see
Slides 4-11)
Studies
of individual differences indicate that people have different styles of thinking
and different methods of representing information. The word style is used in
common language to describe differences between people.
Style is thus a set of individual qualities, activities and behavior that are
maintained over a long period of time. The
appeal of the concept of style in learning is that it provides a framework for
dealing with individuality.
The idea of style has been developed as a construct for many areas; personality, cognition, motivation, perception, learning, and behavior. The great advantage of defining styles is that they appear to be robust in terms of temporal stability. More than 30 different theories of learning styles, and more than thirty instruments, for evaluating learning styles have been proposed. But all is not confusion. Most, if not all, techniques are based on developing a two fundamental dimensions of cognitive style that incorporate a holistic-analytic axis (thinking in whole or in parts) and a verbal-imagery axis (thinking verbally or in mental pictures).
Learning
style appear to be distinct from intelligence, ability and personality (Riding
& Rayner, 1999). Learning style (which is a special style having to do with
the ingrained habits to organizing and representing information) comprises both
cognitive styles and learning/ teaching strategies. Learning styles usually tend
to integrate three basic components: cognitive organization, mental
representation and the integration of both (Riding & Rayner, 1999).
The idea of learning or cognitive styles can be traced
back to the ancient Greek and the model of personality created by Hippocrates
that include four personality type: the melancholic, the sanguine, the
phlegmatic, and the choleric. Carl
Gustav Jung placed the idea on a more scientific footing in his study of types.
Jung introduced the concepts of extraversion and intraversion.
These two fundamental attitudes were derived from observations and
experiences with human types that seem to be more interested in the object or
the subject. In Jung’s view all of us possess both mechanism: extraversion
with a prevalent outward flow of energy an reference to external objects and
intraversion where the conscious content refers to the subject, and that these
differences disposes to see life differently. Jung further divided these two
types into a four-fold classification of thinking, feeling, sensation and
intuition (Bennet 1983).These ideas were picked up later by the mother- daughter
team of Myers and brigs and resulted in the
Myers- Briggs Test indicators (MBTI) which has been applied to more than
50 million individuals world wide.
Strategies
Learning
styles cannot easily be changed. On
the other hand, strategies are dynamic and adaptable to situations. It is not
enough to develop an awareness of one’s learning style (for the student) and
an awareness of the learning styles of a population of students (for the
teacher), this awareness must be translated into a zone of comfort for learning
and teaching strategies, respectively. An
astute learner will develop a repertoire of strategies that favor their
preferred learning style but allow to deal for situations where the preferred
learning style is not effective. This
strategy work includes developing goals, defining hypotheses, deciding on tactic
for problem solving, discovering methods, assessing performance and revising
goals. The same process applies to
instructors. In other words, strategy is a continuing process of self awareness
(meta-cognition) and the acquisition, testing, and improvement of tactics,
methods, and techniques for dealing with tasks.
Conversely, the role of the instructor is to work with students to help
them build a repertoire of strategies to be called upon depending on the
learning situation or environment. The
basic reason for strategy s the need to achieve performance and effectiveness in
a world of change and dissimilarities and the fact that the preferred learning
style might not be ideally matched to the situation at hand.
This repertoire of strategies include enhancing ones preferred learning
style and expanding the range of learning styles by bringing into service
learning style dimensions that are somewhat foreign but more applicable to the
situation or task.
Scientific
method
In
a little book published almost 100 years ago (in 1909). The famed philosopher
James made an impassioned plea for the use of the scientific method in
education. Learning style is one of
the techniques that have the possibility of placing learning and teaching on a
more scientific footing.
Description
of learning styles instruments used
I
selected three instruments to be used to obtain as complete as possible an ides
of students and teachers learning styles. These
test were selected among some thirty competing instruments base on how widely
they were used, their reliability and repeatability, their ease of
interpretation in the learning/teaching context, their availability and cost.
Gregorc
Style Delineator
The
Gregorc style delineator is based on mediation ability theory that sees in the
human mind channels through which information is received and expressed.
The ability (power, capability, efficiency) to utilize these channels is
termed mediation abilities. Two
types of mediation abilities are incorporated in the Gregorc style delineator:
perception and ordering.
Perception
is defined in terms of two qualities: Abstractness and concreteness.
The quality of abstractness allow people to visualize data through their
reason while the quality of concreteness enables to mentally register data
through the direct use of physical senses.
Ordering
refers to the way people arrange information.
Ordering is organized into two qualities: sequence and randomness.
This quality addresses how the mind grasp information either linearly in
a step-by step process (sequence) or in a non-linear leaping fashion
(randomness). The coupling of these
four qualities create the four transactional channels
The
Gregorc Style Delineator is based on the idea that individuals learn through
concrete experience and abstraction in either a random or sequential way.
This leads four styles of learning
Concrete-
sequential (CR) learners that that favor a step-by-step- orderly approach to
organize sensory information
Concrete-
random (CR) learners who learn mostly by trial-and error.
They are also intuitive and independent.
Abstract
- sequential (AS) learners are strongly analytic and logical and favor
verbal form of instruction.
Abstract
– random (AR) learners who prefer an unstructured environment and learner
holistically. They show strong
visual preference toward instruction and information input.
The
Gregorc Style delineator has been tested for reliability. Correlation between
first and second test ion the same population yield a correlation coefficient of
around 0.87, which is significant at a p level of <0.001 (Gregorc, 1982).
In
an analysis of students in an introductory food science and human nutrition
course 41 percent of students were CS, 15 percent AS, 27& AR and 19 percent
CR (Schmidt, Javenkoski & Olson, 2000).
Richard
M. Fedler
The
Index of Learning style, developed primarily by R.M. Felder, cannot be
considered to be validated at this time. The analysis of these styles is in term
of information handling.
Active
versus reflective information processor: active learners are best at doing
something active, while reflective learner like to think it through first
before acting.
Sensing
learners tend to enjoy facts and data while intuitive learners prefer
possibilities and relationships.
Visual
learners remember better pictures, diagrams, flow charts, tables of data,
physical demonstration . Verbal learners get the most out of spoken words or
written explanation
Sequential
learners tend to gain understanding about the world and situations through a
linear, step-by step-process which is logical and systematic.
Global learners need to see the big picture before they tackle the
details. A sudden flash of
understanding is characteristic of their approach to understanding. (Felder
& Soloman, 2000)
Felder
makes the cases for a matching between student learning styles and the teaching
styles of professors or at least the striking of a balance of instructional
methods to meet all the different learning styles available in a classroom
(Felder). He also proposes dire
consequences associated with mismatching between learning styles of most
students in a class and the teaching style.
Inattention, discouragement about the course, the curriculum or even the
students abilities, and withdrawal are predicted
The
Long/Dziuban Learning Style Inventory
Long
observed ambivalence (simultaneous opposing feeling) in adolescents as they
progress developmentally from a state of dependence to independence.
The theory hinges on important determinants of behavior.
Long defines personality in terms of reaction patterns and find that the
intellect is a major resource in expressing this ambivalence.
Levels of sophistication play a major role. The rate of maturation is the
time frame through which all developments take place.
Long defines two dimensions: aggressive/passive and
dependence/independence. The
intersection of these dimensions produces the Long four basic reactive behavior
types:
Aggressive-independent.
Highly energized, action oriented people. They are risk-taker.
Aggressive-
dependent. Highly energized but
direct their energy toward obtaining approval.
They have superior intellectual capabilities and interact closely
with instructors and participate actively in class. They are leaders but
self-critical.
Passive-independent.
They are stubborn but withdraw or become inactive when stressed.
Control over authority is a primary goal.
They tend not to participate in class.
Passive-
dependent. Low energy students
who thrive on affection and approval. They
are extremely sensitive and do more than required.
They are kind, gentle people.
Long
augments his four basic behavior types with auxiliary traits
Phobic
- develop focused and unrealistic fear
Impulsive
- unpredictably erratic
Obsessive/compulsive
- highly organized, methodical and fully planned.
Hysteric
- crisis-prone with little use for monotonous tasks.
Results
and Findings
(see
Slides 19-30)
General
population
The
student population is relatively homogeneous being made of working adult with an
average age of 35 years ( the median age of the US population is 35.5 years) and
a gap of some ten years between the securing of a bachelor degree and the
entering into the MS program. The
student population is largely made of students with a technology background.
With the opening on the program to the world market, the type of students
and their ethnic origin has changed dramatically in the last four years.
In
our population females represent 44.1% of the sample while the general US
population is 51.2 % women.
Ethnic
origin in our sample can be compare to the total US population as follows
|
|
Sample
(%) |
US
population (%) |
|
Caucasian |
52.3 |
82.3 |
|
Afro
American |
24.2 |
12.8 |
|
American
Indian |
0.6 |
0.9 |
|
Asian |
12.7 |
4.0 |
|
Hispanic |
2.5 |
11.5 |
Ethnic
origin by gender in the general US population
Gregorc
Looking
at the results on the Gregorc test we can summarize the basic information for
the total population as follows
|
|
Percentage |
|
Abstract
Random |
7.9 |
|
Abstract
Sequential |
16.8 |
|
Concrete
Random |
19.5 |
|
Concrete
Sequential |
48.9 |
|
Unresolvable |
7.0 |
Comparing
our result to those published by Schmidt
et al
|
|
Univ.
Illinois Percentage |
UMUC
Percentage |
|
Abstract
Random |
26 |
7.9 |
|
Abstract
Sequential |
15 |
16.8 |
|
Concrete
Random |
18 |
19.5 |
|
Concrete
Sequential |
41 |
48.9 |
|
Unresolvable |
|
7.0 |
|
Types
& Traits |
Univ.
Central Florida |
UMUC |
|
Aggressive
Dependent |
60 |
60.4 |
|
Aggressive
Independent |
23 |
25.2 |
|
Passive
Independent |
12 |
10.9 |
|
Passive
Dependent |
5 |
3.6 |
|
|
|
|
|
Phobic |
26 |
33.0 |
|
Compulsive |
72 |
60.8 |
|
Impulsive |
13 |
20.2 |
|
Hysteric |
25 |
12.3 |
This
compares to previously published data as follows:
Utilizing
the learning style information in class
As
an active teacher I often ask students to read supplement material to the book.
This consists of recent articles addressing a current important issue.
Rather than ask the students to report in a textual fashion or a verbal
fashion what they have learned, I ask them to create a graphic presentation
describing the essence of the article. The
results indicate that the students are very good at graphical understanding and
representation. I receive
Tree
diagram - indicating an attempt to parse the text for key ideas
Flow
chart - indicating an attempt to understand the process
Venn
diagram - indicating an attempt to sort out the logic, including the
universe, inclusion, and exclusion
Box
diagram - indicating an attempt to look at relationships between elements
How
does one deal with students that are either global or sequential in their method
of understanding. I deal with the
global thinker by developing an overall subject matter system diagram.
This is a high level representation of all the elements of the subject
matter and their relationships. I
use this diagram in a two-hour session, during the first class to provide an
overview of the class subject matter to be covered in details in later sessions.
This addresses the method of understanding of global thinker.
I introduce this chart at the beginning of each section to indicate to
the students where we have been and were we are doing, providing a kind of rough
road map. The sequential learner
get their best understanding of the material in subsequent sessions when I
explain step-by-step the logic, thinking,. approach, and method.
Gender
Effect
In
our sample we have more female than male Afro American; otherwise sexes are
equally represented. In term of the psychological tests, we find more female
that are abstract random than male in that category and more males that are
abstract sequential. Otherwise the
sex distribution between categories is comparable.
In terms of the Fedler test, all categories are comparable except for
visual input where box sec used this method of information acquisition
predominantly over the verbal mode. Sixty two percent (62 %) of the males are
visual and eighty two percent (82 %) of the females are visual.
In terms of the Long/Dziuban text more males are aggressive independent (
thirty one percent versus eighteen percent); all other categories being
comparable.
Ethnic
Origin Effect
In
our sample Caucasians and Hispanic are underrepresented while African American
and Asian are over represented. Afro
American are 24.2 percent of our sample while they are 12.8 percent of the
general population. Possibly
indicating a later entry in the higher education arena by comparison with White
Americans. Asiatic and Pacific Islander students represent 12.7 percent of our
sample while they are represented at a rate of 4.0 percent in the US population at large.
This is possibly associated with a growing world Asiatic population and
the fact that our distance education now reach to a world population.
In
terms of test results all ethnic origin groups score an intermediate on the
Gregorc test in terms of dominance except for Subcontinent (mostly East Indians)
representative who are dominant in terms of Concrete Random mode.
The same situation exists for the Abstract Sequential mode except that
African American are more dominant and American Indian are more dominant (only 2
cases of American Indian). The
situation is totally reversed for the Concrete Sequential where all ethnic
groups are dominant except for Hispanic. This
dominance being more pronounced for
Afro American, American Indian, and Subcontinent groups. The last group, The
Abstract Random is more mixed with American Indian and Subcontinent being
dominant and others being intermediate. This
is especially apparent for Caucasians with seventy one percent being
intermediate in terms of dominance.
In
terms of the Long Diziuban test, Afro American are largely Aggressive
Independent and Passive Dependent. Caucasian
are mostly aggressive Dependent and Passive Dependent.
In terms of supporting traits, African American are equally distributed
among phobic, impulsive, obsessive and hysteric; the same can be said of
Caucasians. Asiatic students favor the hysteric trait. On the Fedler Active
Versus Reflective characteristic, Afro American are clearly reflective while
Caucasian are clearly active. In
terms of perception all ethnic group favor the Sensing mode except for Hispanic
where no difference can be detected. In
terms of visual versus verbal input, all n populations favor the visual mode of
input. In terms of sequential
versus Global Understanding, African American and American Indian are clearly
sequential. No real important
differences exist for the other groups.
Attitude
Questions
(see
Slides 31-33)
Students
were asked to answer two questions addressing their rationale for entering the
MS in Management of Technology program and for selecting University of Maryland
University College as their institution of choice. The scale is a 0 to 5 Liekert scale.
In
terms of the reasons for entering the MS program, the students gave more
importance to the four choices given as follows: knowledge acquisition (4.45
average), obtaining a degree (4.06 average), career advancement (3.79 average)
and career change (2.51 average). Education
is an addiction and the search for new knowledge is important6 for our students.
In
terms of the reasons for selecting UMUC, the students gave more importance to
the following factors in decreasing order: quality of courses (3.91 average),
flexibility of program (3,87 average), quality of instructors (3.55 average),
proximity to UMUC (3.09 average) and tuition cost (2.64).
These answers confirm our strategy that focuses on quality and
flexibility. Proximity is still
important since about 75 percent of our students are still located in the
Maryland, Washington, DC, and Virginia areas.
Is not surprising that tuition cost are relatively inportant6 since more
than 80 percent of the students have their tuition cost reimbursed by their
employer upon securing a grade of B or better.
Conclusions
Students
appear to be substantially different in terms of intelligence, ability,
aptitudes, attitudes and experience. A
typical class of 25 to 30 students will present to the instructor
a range of these qualities as well as a diversity of learning styles and
cognitive methods. This means that
instructors must incorporate in their class material enough material, methods of
delivery to address the need of each and all students.
This can be achieved by developing a comprehensive knowledge of students
learning styles.
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