Thursday, 17 December 2009 09:25

New Research Shows Learning Styles Are Nonsense

Written by Keiron Walsh
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New research has confirmed what we already know: learning styles (i.e., you are a visual learner or an auditory learner) are not real and students do not benefit from being taught in a way that matches that learning style.

Are you a verbal learner or a visual learner? Chances are, you've pegged yourself or your children as either one or the other and rely on study techniques that suit your individual learning needs. And you're not alone— for more than 30 years, the notion that teaching methods should match a student's particular learning style has exerted a powerful influence on education. The long-standing popularity of the learning styles movement has in turn created a thriving commercial market amongst researchers, educators, and the general public.

The wide appeal of the idea that some students will learn better when material is presented visually and that others will learn better when the material is presented verbally, or even in some other way, is evident in the vast number of learning-style tests and teaching guides available for purchase and used in schools. But does scientific research really support the existence of different learning styles, or the hypothesis that people learn better when taught in a way that matches their own unique style?

Unfortunately, the answer is no, according to a major new report published this month in Psychological Science in the Public Interest, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science. The report, authored by a team of eminent researchers in the psychology of learning—Hal Pashler (University of San Diego), Mark McDaniel (Washington University in St. Louis), Doug Rohrer (University of South Florida), and Robert Bjork (University of California, Los Angeles)—reviews the existing literature on learning styles and finds that although numerous studies have purported to show the existence of different kinds of learners (such as "auditory learners" and "visual learners"), those studies have not used the type of randomized research designs that would make their findings credible.

Nearly all of the studies that purport to provide evidence for learning styles fail to satisfy key criteria for scientific validity. Any experiment designed to test the learning-styles hypothesis would need to classify learners into categories and then randomly assign the learners to use one of several different learning methods, and the participants would need to take the same test at the end of the experiment. If there is truth to the idea that learning styles and teaching styles should mesh, then learners with a given style, say visual-spatial, should learn better with instruction that meshes with that style. The authors found that of the very large number of studies claiming to support the learning-styles hypothesis, very few used this type of research design. Of those that did, some provided evidence flatly contradictory to this meshing hypothesis, and the few findings in line with the meshing idea did not assess popular learning-style schemes.

No less than 71 different models of learning styles have been proposed over the years. Most have no doubt been created with students' best interests in mind, and to create more suitable environments for learning. But psychological research has not found that people learn differently, at least not in the ways learning-styles proponents claim. Given the lack of scientific evidence, the authors argue that the currently widespread use of learning-style tests and teaching tools is a wasteful use of limited educational resources.

Source: EurekAlert (Press Release)

Last modified on Friday, 23 April 2010 08:02

2 comments

  • Comment Link Keiron Wednesday, 01 September 2010 11:01 posted by Keiron

    What I find odd about learning styles is that reading is considered visual processing, yet reading involves converting a visual image to an auditory code and, therefore, uses visual and auditory processing. If your student was able to read her lines out loud, she must have been able to translate the visual code to an auditory one. Learning styles does not really seem to be an adequate explanation of how she overcame her difficulty in learning the lines. I think a better explanation is that saying the lines out loud is more like the actual performance. Rote repetition is usually a poor way of learning anything. I also suspect that she did better at drama because it is not as academically challenging as other subjects.

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  • Comment Link D Ostle Thursday, 15 July 2010 16:55 posted by D Ostle

    I totally disagree. As an academic learning mentor I used students learning styles to identify the best way method for that student to process information. I have seen this work with my own eyes.
    I had a student who was having major difficulties learning her lines for a GCSE exam for Drama, she had been reading them to herself for three weeks and still could not remember them.
    We did her VAK and discovered that she was an Auditory, Kinaesthetic learner. She went into a room alone and walked around and read her lines out loud.
    She subsequently earned an A* at her Drama GCSE, the only grade she earned above a D in all the exams she took and the only exam that she used her learning styles in prepaation.

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Keiron Walsh

Keiron Walsh

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