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Callan, Roger John – NASSP Bulletin, 1996
Describes a project involving a group of 65 freshmen at a private girls' high school. After taking the Dunn, Dunn, and Price Learning Style Inventory, students were given their preferred learning-style profiles and instructions for adapting learning and study methods. Test scores improved substantially without implementing a comprehensive…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, High Schools, Individual Differences, Learning Strategies
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O'Brien, Lynn – NASSP Bulletin, 1989
Schools should probably spend more time developing student awareness of learning styles than pushing teachers into more inservice workshops on adapting curriculum. The Learning Channel Preference Checklist included in this article allows students to assess their own preferred learning style(s) by choosing statements stressing visual, auditory, or…
Descriptors: Auditory Perception, Cognitive Style, Elementary Secondary Education, Individual Differences
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Languis, Marlin L. – NASSP Bulletin, 1998
Reports on two studies. The first, a brain-imaging study evaluating brain-processing differences between high- and low- performing middle-school students attempting a spatial visualization task, establishes the connection between brain-processing patterns and task-learning efficiency. The second study, involving 33 women graduate education majors,…
Descriptors: Brain, Cognitive Style, Education Majors, Efficiency
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Taylor, Calvin; And Others – NASSP Bulletin, 1992
Instead of becoming a launching pad for tomorrow, schooling must be worthwhile for today. Learning to learn must overshadow the acquisition of methods, skills, and knowledge. Educators must conscientiously avoid programs that accommodate the masses at the expense of individuals. Principals must exercise influence to replace memorization and rote…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Cognitive Style, Creative Thinking, Democratic Values