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

Education

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 styles
academic potential
intelligence bias
visual learners
hands-on learners
core subjects
education
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