Transcription of Identifying Visual-Spatial and Auditory-Sequential …
{{id}} {{{paragraph}}}
Visual-Spatial and Auditory-Sequential Learners Identifying Visual-Spatial and Auditory-Sequential Learners: A Validation Study Linda Kreger Silverman At the beginning of the 20th century, students sat in rows, and learned the same lessons in the same manner as their classmates. The only means of differentiation was pace of learning. In one-room schoolhouses, children were often allowed to progress to the next level when they had completed the current one. The concept of continuous progress was particularly beneficial for gifted students; it is recently being rediscovered. An educational innovation toward the end of the century was the recognition that students learn differently from each other.
Visual-Spatial and Auditory-Sequential Learners observers, learn holistically, need more time to process information, and think in pictures. These are the essential distinctions between the two learning styles.
Domain:
Source:
Link to this page:
Please notify us if you found a problem with this document:
{{id}} {{{paragraph}}}
501 grammar and writing questions, GRAMMAR, English II Pacing Guide, TECHNICAL REPORT, YEAR 11 GCSE RESISTANT MATERIALS, YEAR 11 GCSE RESISTANT MATERIALS Essential, GRAMMAR PUNK 9-12 Welcome to the 9th Grade, Welcome to the 9th Grade, Scholastic Assessment Test, Test Specifications, The Trivium of Classical Education