Learning Style Quiz | INFJ Forum

Learning Style Quiz

What is your learning style?


  • Total voters
    3

Gaze

Donor
Sep 5, 2009
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INFPishy
http://www.engr.ncsu.edu/learningstyles/

poll to be added

  • Active vs. Reflective Learner
  • Sensor vs. Intuitive
  • Visual vs. Verbal
  • Sequential vs. Global



  • If your score on a scale is 1-3, you are fairly well balanced on the two dimensions of that scale.
  • If your score on a scale is 5-7, you have a moderate preference for one dimension of the scale and will learn more easily in a teaching environment which favors that dimension.
  • If your score on a scale is 9-11, you have a very strong preference for one dimension of the scale. You may have real difficulty learning in an environment which does not support that preference.


ACTIVE AND REFLECTIVE LEARNERS

  • Active learners tend to retain and understand information best by doing something active with it--discussing or applying it or explaining it to others.
  • Reflective learners prefer to think about it quietly first.
  • "Let's try it out and see how it works" is an active learner's phrase;
  • "Let's think it through first" is the reflective learner's response.
  • Active learners tend to like group work more than reflective learners, who prefer working alone.
  • Sitting through lectures without getting to do anything physical but take notes is hard for both learning types, but particularly hard for active learners.

SENSING AND INTUITIVE LEARNERS

  • Sensing learners tend to like learning facts, intuitive learners often prefer discovering possibilities and relationships.
  • Sensors often like solving problems by well-established methods and dislike complications and surprises;
  • Intuitors like innovation and dislike repetition. Sensors are more likely than intuitors to resent being tested on material that has not been explicitly covered in class.
  • Sensors tend to be patient with details and good at memorizing facts and doing hands-on (laboratory) work;
  • Intuitors may be better at grasping new concepts and are often more comfortable than sensors with abstractions and mathematical formulations.
  • Sensors tend to be more practical and careful than intuitors;
  • Intuitors tend to work faster and to be more innovative than sensors.
  • Sensors don't like courses that have no apparent connection to the real world;
  • Intuitors don't like "plug-and-chug" courses that involve a lot of memorization and routine calculations.

VISUAL AND VERBAL LEARNERS

  • Visual learners remember best what they see--pictures, diagrams, flow charts, time lines, films, and demonstrations.
  • Verbal learners get more out of words--written and spoken explanations. Everyone learns more when information is presented both visually and verbally.
  • Students mainly listen to lectures and read material written on chalkboards and in textbooks and handouts. Unfortunately, most people are visual learners.
  • Good learners are capable of processing information presented either visually or verbally.

SEQUENTIAL AND GLOBAL LEARNERS


  • Sequential learners tend to gain understanding in linear steps, with each step following logically from the previous one.
  • Global learners tend to learn in large jumps, absorbing material almost randomly without seeing connections, and then suddenly "getting it."
  • Sequential learners tend to follow logical step wise paths in finding solutions;
  • Global learners may be able to solve complex problems quickly or put things together in novel ways once they have grasped the big picture, but they may have difficulty explaining how they did it.


http://www4.ncsu.edu/unity/lockers/users/f/felder/public/ILSdir/styles.htm
 
Last edited:
Reflective 3 - Slight preference
Intuitive 9 - Strong preference
Verbal 3 - Slight preference
Global 5 - Moderate preference