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Peer reviewedMeyers, G. Douglas – Bulletin of the Association for Business Communication, 1991
Compares business communication students' thinking styles with the processes and products of collaborative writing groups. Finds that (1) students with identical thinking styles do not naturally team up in forming groups, (2) thinking style is more important than academic major in influencing group success, and (3) thinking style variety within a…
Descriptors: Business Communication, Business English, Classroom Research, Cognitive Style
Peer reviewedThompson, S. V. – Educational Psychology: An International Journal of Experimental Educational Psychology, 1990
Suggests that individual differences in visual imagery and failure to realize their existence may have affected theories of thought throughout history. Offers possible explanations for the failure to validate thinking style differences in educationally significant ways. Argues that increased understanding of mental imagery can improve teaching.…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Style, Cognitive Tests, Creative Thinking
Peer reviewedIsaacs, Ian – Mathematics Education Research Journal, 1990
Students in grades 7 (n=4), 9 (n=9), 10 (n=13), and 11 (n=12) were interviewed to compare the use of intuitive and taught methods of problem solving. Results indicate grade 9 students could efficiently use taught methods as well as intuitive methods, whereas grade 10 and 11 students reverted to basic problem-solving methods and were reluctant to…
Descriptors: Coding, Cognitive Measurement, Cognitive Style, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewedSocial Education, 1992
Presents a three-part set of guidelines for multicultural education. Describes characteristics of ethnic and cultural groups. States principles of ethnic and cultural diversity. Discusses the role of the school, learning differences among ethnic groups, and goals for reform. Includes 23 individual guidelines and a program evaluation checklist. (DK)
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Cognitive Style, Cultural Differences, Cultural Pluralism
Peer reviewedLidstone, Mary-Lynn; Hollingsworth, Sandra – Teacher Education Quarterly, 1992
The article (1) explains the Model of Complexity Reduction that describes shifts in learning to teach, (2) examines two patterns of learning to teach (focused on management and subjects or focused on students), (3) applies the patterns to two cases, and (4) presents implications for teacher development and education. (SM)
Descriptors: Beginning Teacher Induction, Beginning Teachers, Case Studies, Cognitive Style
Peer reviewedForeman, Kathleen – Youth Theatre Journal, 1991
Maintains that the teaching/learning styles implicit in Educational Drama offer native education students a teaching/learning methodology which is compatible with a native teaching/learning style. (SR)
Descriptors: American Indian Education, American Indians, Canada Natives, Cognitive Style
Peer reviewedGoodyear, Peter; And Others – Education and Computing, 1991
Reports on two aspects of the SIMULATE (Simulation Authoring Tools Environment) project: an account of the learning processes that are involved in learning with computer simulations, and an inventory of learner attributes. Topics discussed include ISLEs (intelligent simulation learning environments), prior knowledge, motivation, cognitive style,…
Descriptors: Authoring Aids (Programing), Cognitive Style, Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Simulation
Peer reviewedBrowne, Dauna Bell – Canadian Journal of Native Education, 1990
Reviews 5 models of learning or cognitive styles and the concept of brain hemispheric functions. Discusses the right hemisphere dominant learning style of many Native American children. Presents points to consider when modifying curricula or designing a reading program aimed at all learners. Contains 19 references. (SV)
Descriptors: American Indian Education, American Indians, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Cognitive Style
Peer reviewedSnider, Vicki E. – Educational Leadership, 1990
Learning styles represent a type of aptitude-treatment interaction suggesting that a person's distinctive characteristics (aptitudes) can be matched to a specific treatment (instructional method) yielding a more effective outcome than could otherwise have been achieved. Special education research does not support categorizing youngsters or using…
Descriptors: Aptitude Treatment Interaction, Cognitive Style, Elementary Secondary Education, Evaluation Problems
Peer reviewedStensvold, Mark S.; Wilson, John T. – Science Education, 1990
The relationship between concept mapping and comprehension was investigated in conjunction with science instructional laboratories. Measured were student skills and aptitudes applying aptitude treatment interaction procedures to investigate interactions between a concept mapping treatment and student aptitudes. (KR)
Descriptors: Academic Aptitude, Aptitude Treatment Interaction, Chemistry, Cognitive Structures
Peer reviewedZamel, Vivian – College ESL, 1991
Argues that students' accounts of their efforts to learn English, together with language and literacy acquisition theory, suggest ways that English-as-a-Second-Language teachers and college faculty can promote language development. (18 references) (GLR)
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Cognitive Style, English (Second Language), Higher Education
Peer reviewedLovell, Kathryn L.; And Others – Teaching and Learning in Medicine, 1993
A study evaluated the design and implementation of 10 interactive videodisc instructional modules on neuropathology used in medical instruction at Michigan State University. It investigated levels of student acceptance of the modules, ways in which modules accommodated different learning styles, and modules' facilitation of higher order learning…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Higher Education, Instructional Effectiveness, Instructional Material Evaluation
Peer reviewedHenson, Mark; Schmeck, R. R. – Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1993
Reviews findings from a study of learning style differences among 89 community college and 89 university students using the Inventory of Learning Processes. Finds no significant mean differences between groups but higher correlations on need for approval subscales for community college students, suggesting that they may believe that by acting like…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, College Students, Community Colleges, Comparative Analysis
Peer reviewedRhodes, William C.; Doone, Elizabeth M. – Journal of Emotional and Behavioral Problems, 1992
Describes experimental research agenda that involved incorporation of familiar activities into holistic emerging, student-directed curriculum for students labeled as exceptional, emotionally disturbed, conducted disordered, or generally at risk. Describes attempt to develop curriculum of the mind which could help reconstruct the child's way of…
Descriptors: At Risk Persons, Behavior Disorders, Cognitive Style, Curriculum Development
Peer reviewedNelson, Barbara; And Others – Journal of College Student Development, 1993
Assigned community college first-year students (n=1,089) to three groups that differed with the intensity of a learning style intervention. Follow-up during the next semester revealed that students in the highest intensity group achieved significantly higher grade-point averages and higher retention rates than those in the other groups. (Author/NB)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Academic Persistence, Change Strategies, Cognitive Restructuring


