Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

46
learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011

Transcript of Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

Page 1: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

learning styles & how to use them

Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford)

2011

Page 2: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

Aim

To introduce the participants to the concept and the use of learning

styles

and linking it to the e-portfolio

Page 3: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

Objectives

At the end of the sessions the participants will have: been introduced to the Honey & Mumford

Learning Styles seen the variety of styles amongst their

fellow colleagues related their learning styles to themselves

and their own lives some awareness of the implications for the

e-portfolio

Page 4: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

Perceptions

What do you see? Demonstrates the

value in working with others

Page 5: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.
Page 6: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.
Page 7: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.
Page 8: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.
Page 9: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

On to Honey & Mumford…

Page 10: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

Honey & Mumford Learning Style Learners

4 axes:

Page 11: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

Activists

Involve themselves fully & without bias in new experiences

Open minded & not sceptical, enthusiastic about anything new

Days are filled with activity When one activity is dying down,

they’re on the look-out for another

“I’ll try anything once”

Page 12: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

Activists

But: Act first & consider the consequences

after Centre all the activities around

themselves! Thrive on challenge, but bored with

implementation and long term consolidation

Page 13: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

Reflectors

stand back and ponder about experiences

enjoy observing other people, adopt a low profile

act on the past, the present and the opinion of others

= a more ‘rounded’ reflection

“Do you mind if I think about it more first?”“We need to be cautious”

Page 14: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

Reflectors

But: thorough collection and analysis of

data can delay reaching a definite conclusion

Page 15: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

Theorists

observe and make theories analyse and synthesise go back to basic assumptions,

principles, theories, models and systems

“If it’s logical, it must be good”“Does it make sense?”

“How does this fit in with that?”

Page 16: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

Theorists

But: perfectionists tend to be detached Analytical feel uncomfortable with subjective

judgments, lateral thinking and anything flippant

Page 17: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

Pragmatists

keen on trying out ideas, theories & techniques to see if they work

return from management courses brimming with new ideas that they want to try out

essentially practical down to earth people & get on with things

“There is always a better way”“If it works it is good”

“How can I apply this to practice?”

Page 18: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

Pragmatists

But: impatient with ruminating and open-

ended discussions

Page 19: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

The graphs

Page 20: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

Whats the NORM = “all rounded”

-30

-25

-20

-15

-10

-5

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

-30 -25 -20 -15 -10 -5 0 5 10 15 20 25 30

REFLECTOR

PRAGMATIST

ACTIVIST THEORIST

Page 21: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

Reflector Theorist

-30

-25

-20

-15

-10

-5

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

-30 -25 -20 -15 -10 -5 0 5 10 15 20 25 30

REFLECTOR

PRAGMATIST

ACTIVIST THEORIST

Page 22: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

Reflector - Theorist

Commonest variant style “ANALYSIS TO PARALYSIS”

Page 23: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

Activist - Pragmatist

-30

-25

-20

-15

-10

-5

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

-30 -25 -20 -15 -10 -5 0 5 10 15 20 25 30

REFLECTOR

PRAGMATIST

ACTIVIST THEORIST

Page 24: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

Activist - Pragmatist

2nd commonest variant style but they do things too quickly!!!

Page 25: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

Activist - Theorist

-30

-25

-20

-15

-10

-5

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

-30 -25 -20 -15 -10 -5 0 5 10 15 20 25 30

REFLECTOR

PRAGMATIST

ACTIVIST THEORIST

Page 26: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

Activist - Theorist

Not a common style jump to conclusions

Page 27: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

Activist - Reflector

-30

-25

-20

-15

-10

-5

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

-30 -25 -20 -15 -10 -5 0 5 10 15 20 25 30

REFLECTOR

PRAGMATIST

ACTIVIST THEORIST

Page 28: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

Activist - Reflector

uncommon But depending on the proportions,

have the ability to reflect before they act = a good thing

Page 29: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

How does all of this tie in with the

e-portfolio?

Page 30: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

Activists - Pros

Enthusiastic about anything new

You need to capture this in your e-portfolio. Love projects and new experiences

Why did you engage in an activity? etc. Act first, consider consequences later

Capture the consequences and reflect later. What have you learned?

Page 31: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

Activists - Cons

Days are filled with activity/Bored with long term consolidation

Will you have time for the e-portfolio? (schedule it in because when one activity is dying down, you’ll already be onto another).

Will you get bored with the activity by the time it needs logging on?

End up with lots of incomplete PDPs (long term consolidation).

Might end up overwhelming the e-portfolio (with all the activities)

Be selective – what is useful & what shows curriculum coverage.

Page 32: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

Reflectors - Pros

Very good observers

Capture what you’ve seen, heard or feel. Capture an ‘all rounded view”

Act on the past, the present and opinions. Good at exploring ‘feelings’

As well as the mechanics of an issue.

Page 33: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

Reflectors - cons

Can postpone reaching a definite conclusion

And may end up adding entries too late. Capture the views of everyone and

everything around them

May result in long entries – think about those who have to read them!

Page 34: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

Theorists - Pros

The e-portfolio might complement their learning style

Because it helps provide a structure for their learning.

eg what did you learn from the event, what will you do differently, how will you do this, by what time?

Often add entries in a logical way

Starting from first principles and basic assumptions.

Therefore, the flow is often good.

Page 35: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

Theorists - cons

Theorists are perfectionists and the e-portfolio isn’t

E-portfolio may not accommodate all real life situations.

Where do you put what? Tend to be detached and analytical

You need to show your ‘humanistic’ side.

Subjectivity and ambiguity are just as important as objectivity.

For that, you need to get comfortable with lateral thinking + ruminating/open ended discussions.

Page 36: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

Pragmatists - pros

Return from courses brimming with pragmatic ideas

Capture them in the e-portfolio, may help you keep a log of them so you don’t forget.

Practical people

Placing learning events in context. See problems and opportunities as

challenges

And the ARCP panels like that attitude.

Page 37: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

Pragmatists - cons

Practical down to Earth people

May ignore the e-portfolio as they might not see how it can help them with their day to day work.

Concentrate on the mechanics rather than people and feelings

Be careful, you need to capture both – a balance. Impatient with ruminating and open ended

discussions

And sometimes you need that to help things progress.

Page 38: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

If you were the norm:

The ideal for the e-portfolio IS the NORM: all rounded no extremes to stop them from using the e-

portfolio in a skewed way

Page 39: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

…and something about how we run our scheme

How else can you use learning styles to your advantage?

Page 40: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

Putting it all together

When learning, use learning styles to: Complement your preference style Use methods to boost weaker areas

We use them to: Design courses to appeal to a set of

different learning styles Learning styles can be used to achieve a

balance of skill mix within a team/group

Page 41: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

Methods of Instruction

the lecture the modified

lecture the

demonstration Practical sessions Readings group discussion conferences seminars workshops, clinics the fishbowl

role-play simulation games videos/films brainstorming programmed instruction field trips question and answer

Page 42: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

Things we do on our scheme:

Page 43: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

Multi-modality learning

We remember: 10% of what we read 20% of what we hear 30% of what we see 50% of what we see and hear 80% of what we say 90% of what we say, hear and do

(Rigg)

Page 44: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

So don’t dismiss the exercises

Page 45: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

Close

HDR exercises, tasks and games are carefully designed to:

Explore new avenues, so don’t just dismiss them

We often put a lot of thought into them Don’t mock them until you’ve tried

them So :

Page 46: Learning styles & how to use them Ramesh Mehay Programme Director (Bradford) 2011.

Close

Go out there and PLAY!