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Peer reviewedGreen, Beryl – International Schools Journal, 1998
Howard Gardner's multiple intelligences theory has exciting implications for planning new curricula, especially for children with dyslexia. These children have been "educated" in a system that has failed them. Gardner's theory allows an open-ended approach to assessing dyslexic children's intelligence. Understanding the eight…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Cognitive Style, Curriculum Development, Dyslexia
Peer reviewedPeacock, Matthew – International Journal of Applied Linguistics, 2001
Investigated Reid's (1987) hypothesis that a mismatch between teaching and learning styles causes learning failure, frustration, and demotivation. Data were collected through Reid's questionnaire, interviews, and tests using 206 English-as-a-foreign-language (EFL) students and 46 EFL teachers at a Hong Kong university. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, College Students, English (Second Language), Foreign Countries
Peer reviewedMosenthal, James – Journal of Literacy Research, 1996
Investigates the learning of a preservice student in a field-based, literacy methods course. Finds that what counted as her situated learning was how she saw the use of certain literacy practices to be appropriate in the situation of her work, and how she saw her instructional decisions to be a means for achieving her emerging standards for good…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Style, Field Instruction, Higher Education
Peer reviewedZhang, Li-Fang; Watkins, David – Higher Education, 2001
Studied the relationship between student approaches to learning and stages of cognitive development, also considering the validity of the theory of development of W. Perry (1970). Results for 67 U.S. and 193 Mainland Chinese students suggest a relationship between cognitive development and student learning approaches with different patterns for…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Cognitive Style, College Students, Educational Theories
Peer reviewedAndrusyszyn, Mary-Anne; Cragg, C. E.; Humbert, Jennie – Journal of Nursing Education, 2001
Nurse practitioner students using distance education (n=86) indicated a preference for self-direction, concrete examples, and small-group discussion. Print was their most preferred and audiotapes their least preferred format. Convenience, self-direction, and timing were more important than delivery method or learning style. Preferred order of…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Cognitive Style, Course Content, Delivery Systems
Peer reviewedLi, Anita K. F.; Adamson, Georgina – Roeper Review, 1995
Thirty intellectually gifted secondary school students and their nongifted siblings (n=32) were compared. No significant differences were found among the siblings (gifted versus nongifted) in self-perceptions nor in preferred learning style (competitive, cooperative, or individualistic). Gender was also not significant. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Cognitive Style, Secondary Education, Secondary School Students
Peer reviewedGage, Richard – English Journal, 1995
Suggests that accommodating students' learning styles will bring English classrooms alive. Discusses various learning styles. Describes five strategies for kinesthetic learners. (RS)
Descriptors: Class Activities, Cognitive Style, English Instruction, Individual Differences
Peer reviewedSimeone, Wendy F. – English Journal, 1995
Describes several activities for the kinesthetic learner that were developed for a high-school World Literature curriculum. (RS)
Descriptors: Class Activities, Cognitive Style, English Instruction, High Schools
Peer reviewedKahn, David – NAMTA Journal, 1996
Discusses the theory of multiple intelligences and Montessori practice as interpreted by Torff, Dubovoy, Baker, Hilliard, Zener, and Sillick (PS 524 854-859). Claims that Gardner and Montessori both look beyond the notion of fixed IQ, and their joint perception of human potential tends toward the boundless, and the belief that each child can make…
Descriptors: Aptitude, Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Style, Early Childhood Education
Peer reviewedHilliard, Asa G. – NAMTA Journal, 1996
Describes the view of intelligence in Montessori education and dismisses a variety of limited and dehumanizing models of education. Refers to the Montessori model as a "human metaphor" that actually responds to who children are and what they need, and extends that metaphor to the world community at large, encompassing the author's spiritual…
Descriptors: Childhood Needs, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Style, Educational Theories
Peer reviewedDyer, James E.; Osborne, Edward – Journal of Agricultural Education, 1996
Illinois secondary agriculture students were taught 2 units; 1 group using a problem-solving approach (n=72) and the other a subject-matter approach (n=61). Neither approach nor cognitive style were related to achievement. Field-neutral learners scored significantly higher using problem solving when relevant and meaningful problems were used. (SK)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Agricultural Education, Cognitive Style, Field Dependence Independence
Peer reviewedPorter, Gayle; Tansky, Judith W. – Human Resource Development Quarterly, 1996
A survey on beliefs about the changeability of conditions was completed by 102 undergraduates, who then participated in an experiment in which they responded to a hypothetical letter from a potential employer. Differences were found between those who had a performance-judgment (belief in fixed traits) and a learning orientation (belief in…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Beliefs, Cognitive Style, Goal Orientation
Peer reviewedMau, Wei-Cheng – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2000
Comparison of 540 U.S. and 1,076 Taiwanese college students showed that career decision-making style is significantly associated with career decision-making self-efficacy. Cultural background and gender influenced both decision-making styles and self-efficacy. (Contains 53 references.) (SK)
Descriptors: Career Choice, Cognitive Style, College Students, Cultural Differences
Peer reviewedSamples, Bob – Science Teacher, 2000
Explains how learning occurs in the brain, specifically in the limbic system. Compares traditional teaching methods and diverse learning modes. Describes the characteristics of diverse instructional approaches. First published in 1994. (YDS)
Descriptors: Brain, Cognitive Style, Conventional Instruction, Diversity (Student)
Peer reviewedWinters, Clyde A. – Journal of Correctional Education, 2000
Reviews psychosocial cognitive teaching methods that correctional educators are using to remediate student academic deficits: computer-managed instruction, social/moral education, and essay writing and language arts. (Contains 15 references.) (JOW)
Descriptors: Adult Education, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Style, Computer Managed Instruction


