Your Child's Learning Style: What It Is and Why It Is Important

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Do you know your child’s preferred learning style? Does your daughter tend to memorize information after simply reading it? Does your son enjoy building detailed Lego kits? These behaviors are often indicators of learning preferences. Identifying a child’s learning style is important to ensuring the best chance for academic success.

The seven main learning styles are visual, auditory, tactile, kinesthetic, logical, social and solitary. Visual and auditory learners have an advantage, as traditional classroom instruction is catered more to them. Visual learners do well by reading, viewing lists, charts, images, reading their teachers’ facial expressions, diagrams, etc. Auditory learners benefit form verbal instruction, talking through problems and using rhythm and music as memory aids.

Tactile and kinesthetic learners may have had a more difficult time in classrooms years ago, but fortunately, teachers today are much more willing to allow children to move about the room to engage in the lesson. Kinesthetic learners need to move their bodies as they learn, and tactile learners like to use their hands to comprehend the material. Both of these preferences are conducive to building 2D or 3D models with clay, play dough or building materials such as Legos.

Kinesthetic learners might like to learn about the human body, for example, by jumping, running, stretching and discussing which parts of the body are allowing them to do such things. Both tactile and kinesthetic learners might enjoy doing their writing assignments on large marker boards or butcher paper, so they are not confined to a desk and can immerse themselves more in the project. Also, a kinesthetic learner is more likely to memorize facts while playing catch, jumping rope or clapping. Children in both of these categories would learn better through a hands-on science experiment rather than by simply reading about a concept via text.

Another type of learning preference is logical. The logical learner enjoys mathematics, proving equations and using reasoning and systems. This student will do well to write out lists of goals or steps to figure something out. He is likely to use the scientific method approach to solve a problem, and he may become frustrated if he doesn’t know why something is the way it is. Quite often, logical learners excel with technology, providing them an advantage in more modern classrooms.

The last two categories of learning preferences are social and solitary. Social students thrive by working in groups, while those who prefer solitary learning may not. These students will do better with self-paced learning and individualized study plans. It is important to find a niche of interest for a solitary learner and base lessons around that. For example, if you have a child obsessed with airplanes, you can use this to teach about gravity, weather, physics and movement. Fortunately for students who prefer to learn independently, there are opportunities for online learning where these solitary learners can feel comfortable and succeed.

So now that you know the basic learning styles, chances are you see your child in one or more category. A good age to begin identifying your child’s learning style is around 6 or 7, because at this point, his preferences are likely established.

Once you and your child’s teacher know your child’s learning preference(s), you can know better how to approach his education. Experts recommend students be taught using a variety of methods—not just the preferred style. However, using this preference to teach the most difficult lessons can be very effective. It is also necessary to reinforce lessons using multiple styles of instruction. To truly ensure the best chance of success, teachers need to provide learning tools to enhance and improve abilities in areas where students are weaker. For example, an auditory learner should be taught using a kinesthetic lesson plan, but the teacher should aid that student in working through this type of lesson that’s not as friendly to his natural abilities.

Olathe mom Karen Johnson has three children, ages 6, 4 and 2. She writes at The21stCenturySAHM.com.

 

Quiz: What type of learner is your child?

1. Your child was assigned a report on a wild animal. She asked to visit the zoo to see and touch stingrays in their natural habitat. Your child is most likely:

          A. a tactile learner

          B. a social learner

          C. a kinesthetic learner

          D. an auditory learner

 

2. Your daughter was told to create a project showing the water cycle. Which of the following would indicate that she is a logical learner?

          A. She immediately jumped on the computer to research

          water cycles after school.

          B. She created a step-by-step detailed diagram of the water

          cycle, complete with a color-coded key.

          C. She created a rain measurement tool and is leaving cups

          of water around the house to observe water’s evaporation.

          D. All of the above.

 

3. Your son’s foreign language teacher tells you that he most enjoys listening to translation activities via headphones and computer during class. Your son would be best described as an:

          A. social, visual learner

          B. tactile, kinesthetic learner

          C. auditory, solitary learner

          D. logical, social learner

 

4. Which of the following is a helpful lesson for teaching math to a kinesthetic learner?

          A. Having him measure how far he kicked the soccer ball

          to determine the length of the field.

          B. Having him draw a soccer field and describe its

          Measurements.

          C. Watching the teacher draw the measurements on the

          white board.

          D. Working in groups to draw a soccer field to scale on

          paper.

 

5. Your child can be identified as a visual, social learner. She was assigned a group project on the Civil War. What might be a good role for her within the group?

          A. Creating a 3D battle field.

          B. Reenacting a battle scene for the class.

          C. Writing out a detailed synopsis of why the war occurred.

          D. Researching little-known facts about the Civil War and

          reporting her findings back to the group.

 

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