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Dunn, Rita; Carbo, Marie – Educational Leadership, 1981
Research shows that from the beginning students should be taught through their perceptual strengths; students can identify their preferences accurately; and younger children learn better through visual experiences than auditory experiences, and best through tactile-kinesthetic experiences. (Author)
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Learning Modalities, Learning Processes, Research Needs
Barbe, Walter B.; And Others – Academic Therapy, 1981
The authors refute attempts to reject modality based instruction for reading disabled students. They suggest that although no incontestible evidence justifies modality based instruction, further research on the issue should be conducted. J. Kampworth responds by emphasizing the lack of conclusive data. (CL)
Descriptors: Exceptional Child Research, Learning Modalities, Reading Difficulties, Reading Instruction
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Jarman, Ronald F. – Child Development, 1979
Techniques of presenting information temporally in the auditory and visual modalities and spatially in the visual modality were used to assess information processing in seven- and nine-year-old children. (JMB)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Processes, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students
Samples, Bob – Media and Methods, 1979
Recounts the experiences of an education expert who learned from his Navajo Indian students that there are many modes of learning. Identifies the dominant modes as symbolic/abstract, visual, kinesthetic/integrative, and auditory; argues for the value of each. (First part of a two-part article.) (FL)
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, Behavior Patterns, Ethnocentrism, Learning Modalities
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O'Neill, Daniela K.; And Others – Child Development, 1992
Three studies investigated the degree to which young children understand that the acquisition of certain types of knowledge depends on the modality of the sensory experience involved. Results suggest that an appreciation of the different types of knowledge our senses can provide develops between the ages of three and five years. (GLR)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Individual Development, Learning Modalities, Metacognition
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Gilbert, John K. – Science and Education, 1999
Discusses the nature of explanations and the nature of models and the relationship between them. Reviews the explanatory value of major models of change in science. Models the characteristics of everyday thinking and the effect of attempts to change that thinking on scientific thinking. (Author/CCM)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Mapping, Learning Modalities, Models
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Bova, Breda; Kroth, Michael – Journal of Workplace Learning: Employee Counselling Today, 2001
A survey of the learning preferences of 197 Generation X workers found that they value incidental and action learning. They recognized the need for formal training, but suggested improvements. They preferred learning by doing, visual stimuli, and self-directed learning. (Contains 26 references.) (SK)
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Experiential Learning, Incidental Learning, Learning Modalities
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Desmedt, Ella; Valcke, Martin – Educational Psychology, 2004
Educationists and researchers who consider the use of the learning style concept to address individual differences in learning are often daunted by the multitude of definitions, models, and instruments. It is difficult to make an informed choice. The confusion with cognitive style, a term often used as a synonym, makes it even more complicated.…
Descriptors: Research, Literature Reviews, Citation Analysis, Learning Modalities
Mayrath, Michael Charles – ProQuest LLC, 2009
This study examined the effects of manipulating the modality (text-only, voice-only, voice+text) of a tutorial and restriction (restricted vs. unrestricted) of a simulation's interface on retention and transfer of tutorial content. The tutorial prepared novice students to use Packet Tracer, a simulation developed by Cisco that teaches network…
Descriptors: Multiple Choice Tests, Interaction, Educational Technology, Computer Networks
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Eden, Sigal; Passig, David – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 2007
The process of developing concepts of time continues from age 5 to 11 years (Zakay, 1998). This study sought the representation mode in which children could best express time concepts, especially the proper arrangement of events in a logical and temporal order. Usually, temporal order is examined and taught by 2D (2-dimensional) pictorial scripts.…
Descriptors: Computer Simulation, Time, Concept Formation, Children
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Hernandez-Ramos, Pedro – British Journal of Educational Technology, 2007
This paper describes an intensive 2-hr workshop designed to introduce preservice teachers to digital video in the context of an instructional technology course or as a stand-alone activity. Acknowledging time constraints in most real-life instructional situations, this format takes novices with no or very limited knowledge of video making to the…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Learning Modalities, Creativity, Educational Technology
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Castolo, Carmencita L.; Rebusquillo, Lizyl R. – Journal on Educational Psychology, 2008
Learning styles have a big contribution to the academic performance of a student. Awareness of one's learning styles will help a person maximize his potential in accumulating learning to the best of his ability with the use of his preferred learning styles. The teacher's awareness of the student's learning styles will help him/her select teaching…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, High School Students, Laboratory Schools, Academic Achievement
Baines, Lawrence – Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development, 2008
Discover how teachers can motivate students and help them retain more knowledge longer by using sight, sound, smell, taste, touch, and movement in the classroom. In this first-ever guide to multisensory learning, author Lawrence Baines explains how teachers in every grade and subject can change curriculum from a series of assignments to a series…
Descriptors: Multisensory Learning, Teaching Guides, Grading, Instructional Innovation
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Cole, Juanita M.; Boykin, A. Wade – Journal of Black Psychology, 2008
This study describes two experiments that extended earlier work on the Afrocultural theme Movement Expression. The impact of various learning conditions characterized by different types of music-linked movement on story recall performance was examined. African American children were randomly assigned to a learning condition, presented a story, and…
Descriptors: African American Children, Music, Story Reading, Recall (Psychology)
Wilson, Vicki A. – 1998
The literature on learning styles is full of unresolved issues, both theoretical and practical. Early research into learning styles includes that of H. A. Witkin, who developed the Embedded Figures Test in the late 1960s. This test determines the "field dependence" or "field independence" of individuals, marking their global…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Learning Modalities, Learning Strategies, Literature Reviews
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