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How to Learn Like a Pro!: Lesson 1.1: The Three Learning Styles

How to Learn Like a Pro!
Lesson 1.1: The Three Learning Styles
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Notes

table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright
  4. Table Of Contents
  5. Learn Like a Pro! Welcome to Effective Learning (EL115)--for Students and Instructors
  6. Acknowledgments
  7. Unit 1 Overview--Learning Styles and Preferences; Unit Terms
    1. Lesson 1.1: The Three Learning Styles
    2. Lesson 1.2: Visual Learning
    3. Lesson 1.3: Auditory Learning
    4. Lesson 1.4: Kinesthetic Learning
    5. Lesson 1.5: The Brain Dominance Theory
    6. Lesson 1.6: Howard Gardner's Multiple Intelligences Theory
    7. To the Instructor: Optional Assignments/Activities/Extra Credit Opportunities for Unit 1
  8. Unit 2 Overview--Management of Time, Tools, and Study Environment; Unit Terms
    1. Lesson 2.1: World View and Self Efficacy
    2. Lesson 2.2: Procrastination
    3. Lesson 2.3: Schedules and Scheduling
    4. Lesson 2.4: Graphic Organizers and Study Cards
    5. Lesson 2.5: Study Areas and Study Groups
    6. To the Instructor: Optional Assignments/Activities/Extra Credit Opportunities for Unit 2
  9. Unit 3 Overview--College Level Critical Thinking and Reading; Unit Terms
    1. Lesson 3.1: Comprehending College Level Reading by Using the Reading Apprenticeship Approach
    2. Lesson 3.2: Getting the Most Out of Your Textbooks
    3. Lesson 3.3: Patterns and Context Clues
    4. Lesson 3.4: Close Reading for Literature
    5. Lesson 3.5: Math and Science--Tips for Better Comprehension and for Studying
    6. To the Instructor: Optional Assignments/Activities/Extra Credit Opportunities for Unit 3
    7. RUBRIC FOR THE TAKE-HOME MID-TERM PORTFOLIO PROJECT DUE AFTER THE COMPLETION OF UNITS 1-3
  10. Unit 4 Overview--Listening and Note-Taking; Unit Terms
    1. Lesson 4.1: Note-Taking Part 1, Listening
    2. Lesson 4.2: Note-Taking Part 2, Key Information and Formats
    3. To the Instructor: Optional Assignments/Activities/Extra Credit Opportunities for Unit 4
  11. Unit 5 Overview--Memory Principles and Techniques; Unit Terms
    1. Lesson 5.1: Memory Model and Techniques
    2. Lesson 5.2: Memory as We Age
    3. To the Instructor: Optional Assignments/Activities/Extra Credit Opportunities for Unit 5
  12. Unit 6 Overview--Test-Taking: Pre, Mid, and Post; Unit Terms
    1. Lesson 6.1: Pre- Mid- and Post-Test-Taking Strategies
    2. Lesson 6.2: Handling Test Anxiety
    3. Lesson 6.3: Understanding Test Items
    4. To the Instructor: Optional Assignments/Activities/Extra Credit Opportunities for Unit 6
    5. RUBRIC FOR THE TAKE-HOME FINAL PORTFOLIO PROJECT DUE AFTER COMPLETION OF UNITS 4-6
  13. GRAPHIC ORGANIZERS for Reading/Writing Patterns
  14. OUTSIDE OF THE TEXT RESOURCES: Complete Lane Study Tips Articles List and Link to PDF File

Lesson 1.1: The Three Learning Styles

Two college students studying with a pile of books, notebook, and pen.
“College Students” by CollegeDegrees360 is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0

By the time students enter higher education, most have a pretty good idea how they learn best, though they may not have thought about it specifically. Perhaps you do, too.

For example, is it easier for you to learn by reading the instructions or by studying charts and graphs (visual learning)? Do you do better by hearing someone explain something or by listening to a video presentation (auditory, also known as aural, learning)? Or, does it help you to actually “get your hands on” whatever the task is, whether writing a paper, fixing the sink, or organizing a softball game (kinesthetic learning)?

These three learning styles, as they are called, are some of the most common ways we comprehend information, whether learning in a classroom, a kitchen, or on the job. We will be covering two additional well-known learning theories, the “Brain Dominance Theory” and “Gardner’s Theory of Multiple Intelligences,” as well. But for starters, complete the following exercise.

UNIT 1, EXERCISE 1.1

Take the Learning Style Inventory to capture your “best practices” when it comes to the basic three learning styles. This inventory and others you will take throughout the course will become part of your take-home mid-term and take-home final. When you complete the “Learning Styles Inventory”:

  1. Download the inventory.
  2. Download the article What’s Your Learning Style.
  3. Based on your inventory results, annotate by highlighting, underling, circling, or some other annotation device, ideas about how to maximize your learning style and strengthen others from the lists of multiple styles and preferences. Annotate for at least FIVE helpful perspectives and/or strategies per each of the three learning styles. Save this in your notebook for help with your portfolio’s written response for this unit. Your instructor may require you to hand it in for scoring.

Annotate

Next chapter
Lesson 1.2: Visual Learning
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Copyright © 2016 by Phyllis Nissila. How to Learn Like a Pro! by Phyllis Nissila is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.
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