Tips to identify learners’ preferred learning styles
- Eye movement while thinking
- Visual learners usually look upwards
- Auditory learners usually look straight ahead
- Kinesthetic learners usually look downwards
- Vocabulary clues
- Visual learners often use: I see (your point), I get the picture, In my view, From my perspective
- Auditory learners often use: It sounds (OK, good, familiar, etc.), I hear you, I get the message, It rings a bell
- Kinesthetic learners often use: It feels (good, right, OK, off, etc.), I can relate to that, I have a grasp
- Ikea test (How do people approach assembling a new piece of furniture?)
- Visual learners: Read the instructions before doing anything
- Auditory learners: Have someone else read the instructions to them
- Kinesthetic learners: Try to put the item together without reading the instructions
- Mobile phone test (What do people do with a new mobile phone?)
- Visual learners: Read the instructions before they try to do anything with the phone
- Auditory learners: Ask someone to explain the use of the phone or read the instructions to them
- Kinesthetic learners: Play around and experiment with the phone
- Map reading (How do people use maps to find their way?)
- Visual learners: Look at the whole map and then every road
- Auditory learners: Read out every road to themselves
- Kinesthetic learners: Follow the roads on the map with their fingers
- Behavior-patterns during lessons
- Visual learners: like reading and may seem to day dream during sessions with focus on verbal activities
- Auditory learners: enjoy discussions and may whisper during reading
- Kinesthetic learners: may have a habit of tapping their pencils, and fidgeting during lessons
- Make learners fill out self-assessment quizzes to identify their learning styles (many available online, see Web Resources)
Activities and tools to support VAK Learning
Note for instructors: You have the opportunity to try out all kinds of activities to reach the preferred learning styles of all learners
Visual learners
- Use visuals and graphics to present and organize information (charts, graphs, post-it notes, posters, flash-cards, diagrams, illustrations, pictures, coloured pens and paper, mind-maps, spidergrams)
- Provide lots of written materials, and give exercises that require writing and note taking
- Write key words on flip chart paper and ask learners to write responses
- Invite visual learners to be group recorders
Auditory learners
- Best way to teach an auditory learner is to say it; state the information
- Ask learners to describe specific information
- Provide discussion periods for learners
- Encourage questions
- Foster small group participation
- Use auditory activities (brainstorming, buzz groups, debriefing, reading out loud, oral revisions, stories, anecdotes, jokes, rhymes, jingles, rap, poems, songs)
Kinesthetic learners
- Encourage underlining and highlighting key words and taking notes
- Plan activities that make learners move (group work, role-plays, field trips)
- Initiate activities that make learners use their hands (move and organize post-its, highlight text, make models, transfer text from one medium to an other)
- Put theory into practice
- Provide real-life simulation situations
- Use lots of examples, case studies, and ways of application [1]
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