Add a Comment (0)
Original URL: http://school.familyeducation.com/intelligence/teaching-methods/38522.html



About Visual Learners

by Terry Farwell

We learn by "seeing it" (visually), "hearing it" (auditorily), or "moving and doing it" (kinesthetically), and most of us have one primary learning style through which we best learn and remember information. All of us can benefit from identifying and understanding our individual learning styles.

Seeing is believing

"Material should be presented in a variety of ways to accommodate students' different learning styles. For example, if new spelling words are printed on the blackboard in addition to being said aloud, visual learners see the way the word looks, so they remember more easily." (Parent Newsletter, NDCU Extension Service, October 1997). Simple adjustments in your child's routine based upon his unique learning style will help him to increase academic success and emotional growth.

Visual learners rely upon seeing information. They benefit from seeing the way something looks or works, by watching a demonstration, and recalling images when trying to remember something. The visual learner tends to remember faces rather than names, and give directions based on landmarks rather than street signs. These children excel in classrooms where they see movies, watch overhead projectors for examples of new concepts or material, and take notes. If you were to look in their notebooks, you'd find well-organized sections, pages of notes containing well-documented information, and a lot of doodling.

Strategies for visual learners Special projects
Add a Comment (0)

© 2000-2009 Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved.