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Beware the myth: learning styles affect parents', children's, and teachers' thinking about children's academic potential
Educationnpj Science of Learning

Beware the myth: learning styles affect parents', children's, and teachers' thinking about children's academic potential

X. Sun, O. Norton, et al.

Three experiments reveal how learning style perceptions—whether a student learns visually or through hands-on methods—shape beliefs about academic potential. Conducted by Xin Sun, Owen Norton, and Shaylene E. Nancekivell, this research uncovers a concerning bias: students labeled as visual learners are perceived to be more intelligent and capable in core subjects than their hands-on peers, impacting educational assessments of children.... show more
Abstract
Three experiments examine how providing learning style information (a student learns hands-on or visually) might influence thinking about that student's academic potential. Samples were American and predominately white and middle-class. In Experiment 1, parents (N=94) and children (N = 73, 6–12 years) judged students who learn visually as more intelligent than hands-on learners. Experiment 2 replicated this pattern with parents and teachers (N = 172). In Experiment 3 (pre-registered), parents and teachers (N = 200) predicted that visual learners are more skilled than hands-on learners at "core" school subjects (math/language/social sciences, except science), whereas, hands-on learners were skilled at non-core subjects (gym/music/art). Together, these studies show that learning style descriptions, resultant of a myth, impact thinking about children's intellectual aptitudes.
Publisher
npj Science of Learning
Published On
Oct 17, 2023
Authors
Xin Sun, Owen Norton, Shaylene E. Nancekivell
Tags
learning stylesacademic potentialintelligence biasvisual learnershands-on learnerscore subjectseducation
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