Learning Styles and CBTs and WBTs Bruce W. Jones
![]() |
|
ABSTRACT Student-teacher interaction in the classroom is a key element to the success of the student. This is because the teacher can easily determine the learning style of each student through interaction with that student. In designing CBT and WBT offerings, an Educational Technologist does not have that capability. There should, therefore, be a mechanism that allows the student to determine his or her own learning style. Through the use of an interactive graphical user interface (GUI) this may be a possibility. The design opportunities would be challenging for the designer but the end product would more closely mirror a teacher-led class. There are other applications for a student determinate GUI, which would enhance learning. For example it might be used to increase awareness for physical, mental and language, challenged persons. INTRODUCTION In the classroom, the interaction between the students and the teacher will vary according to the needs and learning styles of the students. The teacher's learning style inventory for each student may be formal, derived from a specific instrument such as Myers-Briggs (MBTI), or it may be informal through observation and interaction with the students. The teacher may also use a variety of styles in the classroom during a single lesson to accommodate individual students. For those students that are kinesthetic in nature the teacher may have a group or individualized exercise that is manipulative in nature. This type of project is, of course, aimed at a person strong in areas such as the laboratory sciences, auto shop, woodworking or model building. This particular person will have to be able to verbalize his project with either a classroom presentation or a written report to show competency in language arts. There may also be an exercise where the introvert has a chance to show off a project that requires him to address the class and thus gain confidence and strength in other learning areas. For this reason, the classroom and the interaction of the teacher with the student becomes a dynamic force for learning. There is, however, a new technology for the delivery of educational material to both the individual and the group, Computer Based Training (CBT) and Web Based Training (WBT). This form of education delivery is a double-edged sword. On the one hand, a larger, more diverse, foundation of knowledge is made available to the student with the ability to expand horizons and afford an opportunity to become a life long learner. The reverse is the loss of student - teacher interaction and the ability of the instructor to make adjustments in the course material to accommodate for various learning styles. This appears to be the manner, by default, in which CBT and WBT courses are being presented. At this time there appears to be no mechanism for determining learning style when delivering either CBT or WBT. This leads to a student that is both totally confused and bored or one that is very successful. Even if the student is presented the material in their preferred learning style, is this a good thing? In a paper on learning styles and their application in the study of Engineering, Richard Felder (1996) had this to say about learning styles in the classroom. "If the professors teach exclusively in a manner that favors their students' This statement also applies to the use of CBT and WBT. If there is only one style of learner addressed in the course of the program and it is not the correct style; we may be discouraging some students from learning. At the same time, a lack of multiplicity of styles may be damaging the flexibility of the student, and limiting the depth of education. Two questions then need to be asked. Can an instrument be designed that determines the student's learning style while using a CBT offering? Is it possible to design a CBT offering that is responsive to the individual yet flexible enough to challenge and strengthen the students other learning and coping skills? With the growing popularity of this mode of learning and the infinite opportunities for self-learning at all levels of education utilizing CBT and WBT, these questions must be answered. DISCUSSION Before designing an educational offering that either addresses a specific learning style or attempts to address a multiplicity of styles several questions must first be answered. A learning style is defined as "...the unique collection of individual skills and preferences that affect how a person perceives, gathers, and processes information." (Johnson & Orwig, 1997). All authors of learning inventory instruments use this definition of learning style. The difference in instruments is the interpretation and classification of the responses. The style is determined by asking the learner to answer a series of questions designed to measure a particular personality attribute. These can be either YES/NO answers, as in the MBTI, a best answer from a given set of choices as in Keirsey, or a ranking of responses as in Canfield's Learning Styles Inventory (CLSI). These instruments represent both the extremes and the median in interpretation. The MBTI, using simple YES/NO answers, classifies the learner using a series of four contrasting classifications. These classifications are extraverts (E)/introverts (I), sensors (S)/intuitors (N), thinkers (T)/feelers (F), and judgers (J)/perceivers (P). This produces 24 distinct personality and learning styles, ranging from ESTJ, typically CEOs, to INFP, artists, and poets. This tends to limit the resources available for the design of lessons for overall populations, but gives the individual greater attention. In CLSI a series of descriptive statements are assigned a value of decreasing rank with 1 being the highest and 4 being the lowest. These are then manipulated through a complicated rubric to define the learner's style. The definition of style derived from Canfield is much broader than the MBTI and takes into consideration four broad categories; conditions, content, mode and expectancy. CLSI not only classifies an individual learning style but also attempts to predict possible academic outcome. This interpretation of learning style gives a much broader range of possibilities and allows for a course of instruction to be specifically designed which utilizes the students strong style and strengthens the weaker ones. Between these two extremes are a multitude of instruments for the determination of learning style. In Keirsey's Temperament Sorter II (KTS II) the format of MBTI is maintained but the questions are directed more towards management style and self-evaluation. The questions are direct statements that require a fill in the blank response using one of two given statements. The results are similar to those derived with MBTI with the definitions "softened" a little. Keirsey has replaced Extraversion/Introversion with Expressive/Reserved; Sensing/Intuitive with Introspection/Observation and Judgement/Perception become Schedulers/Probers. This broadens the definition of the learning styles and allows for more leeway than does the MBTI, allowing the course designer to use a larger number of learning styles when designing. The problem of learning style and its uses in designing course material, especially for the CBT and WBT environment, has also been a subject of educational theorists. H. Gardner's Theory of Multiple Intelligences describes a series of learning categories and the style a person in that category is most likely to use. The categories, as paraphrased by E. Winters (1997) are; words, questions, pictures, music, moving, socializing and alone. Gardner's theory also includes the use of cultural context when designing for a specific learning style. These may include attitudes toward dress, food, housing, beauty and justice as well as colors, age and gender variants. According to Jean Piaget's paper on Intellectual Development (1995) in children, the styles of learning change from birth to eleven years. The child progresses with age from learning the structure of the world around them to abstract thinking. Paiget's theory espouses active or discovery learning. At present this is the main theory utilized in the design and implementation of CBT and WBT courses. This form of design, however, is directed at the K-12 learner. It does not address the adult learner. Knowles and Cross discuss the opposite end of Piaget with a theory of adult education. In the Cross and Knowles models the adult learner style is dictated by experience, age limitations and a need to have a hand in the development of their education. DISCUSSION Several papers have addressed the use of style in the process of designing multimedia course material. Susan M. Montgomery (1995), in a survey of sophomore chemical engineering students, used Soloman's Inventory of Learning Styles to study the student population. These were compared against an earlier study by Felder and used to design a multimedia program specifically addressing the predominant learning styles of the class. Each component of the offering was designed to address each of the four learning styles discovered in the initial survey. She concludes that it is possible to design a CBT that addresses multiple learning styles, however she is designing for a specific class. John Pelley (1998), concerned with distance learning and teleconferencing and John Dwyer (1996), addressing the classroom environment, stress the importance of proper utilization of learning style and teaching. The conclusion of these authors is clear; learning style is of prime importance and has to be taken into consideration when designing the learning environment. The use of learning styles in these scenarios, where the instruction is face to face or specifically designed, is obvious. The use of learning style in CBT and WBT is not so obvious. The reason for this is the hidden nature of the interaction. In the classroom setting the teacher is able to see and hear the students reactions to the various stimuli being offered. If a group of students is beginning to tire of the lecture the teacher can move quickly to a new or different style of teaching and thus a different style of learning is involved. In the teleconferencing theater several miles separate the students and teacher. Effective learning style may not be as readily or rapidly interpreted. In CBT and WBT there is no instructor as such and therefore no capacity for adjustment of learning style. It is therefore imperative that learning style be established early and maintained throughout the course of the lesson. The question is, how? The process for this determination would be to ask the student for specific demographic information: name, student ID #, age, sex, class standing, etc. Each question is separate and must be entered separately. The method of entry would be for the student to choose a graphic between each standard question. The number of questions to be asked and utilized would be determined through research. The initial interfacing graphic would be presented as a series of random shapes, sizes and colors. There would also be a series of symbols representing figures and nature. These figures would, by theory, elicit some subliminal response from the student based on the color, shape, content or combination of these factors (Fig. 1). In searching for a model for this type of graphical interface, a site was found on the Internet that shows an ability to determine your WBTI category through the use of a graphic. The URL for the testing site is, http://www.users.interport.net/~zang/personality.html. A request for research and theory behind the concept has as yet to yield any information from the owner of the site. The test system appears to function as a legitimate instrument as it correlated quite well with tests taken at other sites.CONCLUSION In a classroom setting the determination of the strongest learning style for any given student is essential for the educational designer to be able to produce a learning document utilizing the best learning styles of the individual. In the case of a "blind" design, such as CBT and WBT, tailoring for the individual is impossible. Using a system as described above, a designer will be able to develop a lesson that offers a motivational and interesting lesson formulated around the dominant style of an individual learner yet allows for a multiplicity of users. To be able to determine learning style at the beginning of a lesson would offer unique challenges to the Educational Technologist performing the design work. However, if the designer could produce an offering that allowed for the individual to utilize his or her own dominant learning style and supported lesser learning styles, CBT and WBT would more closely resemble the classroom environment as an effective learning resource. The use of a Graphical User Interface (GUI) to determine learning style will enhance the learning experience of the student by providing motivation based on a learning style that is comfortable for the student. Other possible uses for a GUI pre-testing system could include testing of persons with learning disorders, language problems, physical disabilities and low educational levels. Fig. #1 NAME: FIRST: _______ click on a graphic to proceed Bibliography Adult Learning (P.Cross) Discovered 1998, [On-Line]. Available: http://www.lincoln.ac.nz/educ/tip/10.htmAndragogy (M.Knowles) Discovered 1998, [On-Line]. Available: http://www.gwu.edu/~tip/knowles.htmlDraine, S.C. (1998). Analytic Limitations of Unconscious Processing. Dwyer, J. (1996). Learning Differences and Teaching Styles Felder, R. M. (1996). Matters of Style. ASEE Prism, 6(4), 18 - 23, Ginn, W.Y. (1995). Jean Piaget - Intellectual Development [On-Line]. Available: Johnson, C. & Orwig, C. (1998) What is Learning Style [On-Line]. Available: http://www.sil.org/lingualinks/library/Llearning/CJO652/CJO676.htmMontgomery S. M. (1995). Addressing Diverse Learning Styles Through the Use of Multimedia [On-Line] Multiple Intelligences (H.Gardner), Discovered 1998, [On-Line]. Available: http://www.gwu.edu/~tip/gardner.htmlPelley, J. W. (1998). Implications of Learning Style for Distance Education Paper presented at VISIONS conference Lubbock, Texas October 21 - 23, 1998 Stark, T. (1997). What is Subliminal Influence? [On-Line] Available: http://www.actwin.com/NLP/random/sublm01.htmWinters, E. (1998), Seven Styles of Learning [On-Line]. Available: http://www.bena.com/ewinters/styles.htmlContributed by Bruce Jones to Education Technology Defined on September 30, 1998 |