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Peer reviewedPowell, Thomas W.; Peng, Chao-Ying Joanne – Journal of Speech and Hearing Disorders, 1989
A profile analysis procedure was used with the Carrow Auditory-Visual Abilities Test to aid in the identification of systematic modality preferences in two preschool children with articulation disorders. Critical values are identified to facilitate the identification of the child's strengths and weaknesses at the subtest level. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Articulation Impairments, Auditory Perception, Learning Modalities, Preschool Children
Peer reviewedNewby, Robert F.; And Others – Journal of Learning Disabilities, 1989
The study provided 7 dysphonetic and dyseidetic dyslexic children (aged 8 to 10) with instruction in reading comprehension using a story grammar strategy and instructional approaches matching each dyslexia subtype. Statistically and clinically significant improvements were found in the proportion of qualitatively important story elements recalled…
Descriptors: Dyslexia, Elementary Education, Instructional Effectiveness, Learning Modalities
Peer reviewedRichardson, John G. – Journal of Extension, 1994
In 11 North Carolina counties, extension agents interviewed 7 clients per county; 31 new agents were also interviewed. Results show that "doing" is clearly the most preferred learning mode of both groups. Combinations of learning modes were even greater learning enhancers than individual modes. Seeing, doing, and discussing were the most…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Experiential Learning, Extension Agents, Extension Education
Peer reviewedMcCarthy, Bernice – Educational Leadership, 1990
4MAT is an eight-step instructional cycle that capitalizes on individual learning styles and brain dominance processing preferences. The four major learners (imaginative, analytic, common sense, and dynamic) can use 4MAT to engage their whole brain. Learners use their most comfortable style while being challenged to function in less comfortable…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Elementary Secondary Education, Imagination, Individual Differences
Peer reviewedBeck, Charles R. – Teacher Educator, 2001
Analyzes three common learning style inventories (LSIs)-- 4MAT System, Dunn's LSI, and Renzulli and Smith's LSI--matching them to the most compatible teaching strategies. The paper presents tables to help teachers select the most appropriate teaching strategies, makes suggestions for selecting and designing LSIs, and discusses practical…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Cognitive Style, Elementary Secondary Education, Learning Modalities
Rahm, Jrene – Science Education, 2004
In this paper, I address some of the unique challenges of studies of learning in museums through a microanalytic case study of meaning-making among a group of youth and a curator. Through an examination of youths' forms of participation in one exhibit, I illustrate local meaning making achieved through multiple modalities--by doing, talking, and…
Descriptors: Exhibits, Scientific Literacy, Museums, Case Studies
Byrd, Dana L.; van der Veen, Tanja K.; McNamara, Joseph P. H.; Berg, W. Keith – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2004
Three-, 4-, and 5-year-olds performed Tower of London problems under spoken, manual, and combined (requiring both spoken and manual) response conditions. Preschoolers' solutions were most goal-focused when required to give only a spoken response, intermediately goal-focused when required to give both response types, and least goal-focused when…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Responses, Executive Function, Planning
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
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)
Wallin, Jason – International Journal of Education & the Arts, 2007
This article seeks to articulate developing trends in art education and practice, locating such movements within the broader cultural contexts of globalization, neoliberal capitalism, and postmodernity. Against this more general synopsis, the autobiographical position of the author as a student and teacher of art will be elucidated as inextricably…
Descriptors: Art Education, Educational Trends, Global Approach, Postmodernism
Anderson, Jim; Morrison, Fiona – Canadian Journal of Education, 2007
In this article, we report a study in which we asked 137 parents and caregivers to evaluate a year-long family literacy program in which they participated. Parents valued the insights they gained about children's learning in general and literacy development in particular. They reported that they learned from each other as well as from the program…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Caregivers, Family Literacy, Program Evaluation
Tomlin, Judy G.; And Others – 1983
To determine if patterns of listening and reading skill development in mildly handicapped children differed markedly from those of non-handicapped children, 180 learning disabled (LD), educable mentally retarded (EMR), and nonhandicapped (NH) children from rural and urban settings were given the Durell Listening-Reading Series. A multivariate…
Descriptors: Learning Disabilities, Learning Modalities, Listening Skills, Mild Mental Retardation
Peer reviewedWhiton, Mary Beth – Journal of Reading Behavior, 1975
Concludes that subjects' scores on simultaneously presented tasks were significantly higher than on sequentially presented tasks for both intra- and cross-sensory modalities, suggesting that the ability to integrate sensory information across learning modalities is important in reading acquisition. (RB)
Descriptors: Grade 1, Learning Modalities, Males, Predictive Validity
Jones, John Paul – 1972
Modality research is of major importance to the field of reading; it has directed attention to three factors: intersensory transfer, intersensory perceptual shifting, and modal preference. This paper provides a critical review of the most pertinent research relating each of these factors to reading achievement. No attempt is made to review studies…
Descriptors: Decoding (Reading), Learning Modalities, Reading, Reading Achievement

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