2. Objectives
• Re-cap – Learning theories
• Kolb – Experiential learning
• Honey and Mumford learning styles
• Applying theories in the classroom
• Presentation skills
3. What can we learn from these clips?
• Watch each clip.
• Consider presentation / delivery styles
• Consider learner needs
• Consider learning theories
• Complete you handout sheet and be ready to
discuss!
13. Kolb – Experiential learning
• Experiential learning focuses on the learning
process for the individual.
• It focusses on learning occurring as a cyclical
process.
• The learner must move through all four stages
to learn.
• All learners will have a preference for one or
more stages.
14. VARK
Preferences NOT Strengths
• Visual
• Aural
• Reading/Writing
• Kinesthetic
(VARK inventory developed in 1987 by Neil Fleming, Lincoln University, New Zealand)
15. Honey and Mumford learning styles
Building on Kolb’s theory, H&M state that
learning styles are categorised as:
•Activist
•Reflector
•Theorist
•Pragmatist
16.
17. Activists
• The here and now
• Just do it
• Jump in at the deep end
• Have a go
• Act without thinking it through
• Don’t like preparation
• Get bored easily
18. Reflectors
• Take time to think it through
• Consider all angles and implications
• Listen to others
• Uncomfortable in unplanned situations
• Need information to work on
• Dislike deadlines
20. Pragmatists
• Does it work in practice?
• Like linking the theory to the problem
• Like to tackle it straight away
• Enjoy coaching and feedback
• Don’t like open ended discussions
• Need clear guidelines
• Need immediate reward
21. Why learning styles
Tailoring your teaching style to the learner’s
learning style
AND
All learning styles are important for
developmental learning
Editor's Notes
Visual (V): This preference includes the depiction of information in charts, graphs, flow charts, and all the symbolic arrows, circles, hierarchies and other devices that instructors use to represent what could have been presented in words. Aural (A): This perceptual mode describes a preference for information that is "heard." People with this modality report that they learn best from lectures, tutorials, tapes, and talking to other colleagues. Read/write (R): This preference is for information displayed as words. Kinesthetic (K): By definition, this modality refers to the "perceptual preference related to the use of experience and practice (simulated or real)." Although such an experience may invoke other modalities, the key is that the student is connected to reality, "either through experience, example, practice or simulation"