Some students are visual learners, some need to hear the lesson but a new study questions whether it’s worth the investment.

Students do better when lessons are tailored to individual learning styles — but not so much better that it’s worth the investment of time and money. That’s the main finding of a recent peer-reviewed study I co-authored.

There to try to to a student’s preferred learning style. That’s because some people say they are visual learners, meaning they learn and retain content best through visual aids, such as charts and pictures. Others say they are auditory learners — they need to hear the lesson. Still others may have different learning styles.

As a result, teachers may wonder whether they should invest the time and resources into matching their instruction to each student’s specific learning style.

So Christine Litzinger, a graduate student in educational foundations and research, and I analyzed data from 21 studies with more than 1,700 participants from every stage of education, from elementary school to adult courses.

A student in Pauoa Elementary School 3rd grade Teacher Kristin Tatemichi class raises their hand during a lesson.
There to try to to a student’s preferred learning style. (Cory Lum/Civil Beat/2022)

In each of these studies, researchers had students learn something new with instruction either matched or unmatched to their learning styles. When we analyzed their results together, we found that, overall, students with matched instruction performed slightly better on tests compared with students given unmatched instruction.

But the benefits were it would take to assess every student’s learning style and personalize instruction. Doing so would require substantial resources, as different groups of children would need different materials. Importantly, students would be limited to certain methods of learning and would miss out on opportunities to develop skills in other styles. For example, visual learners would miss out on developing their listening skills.

Why It Matters

Learning styles are a contentious topic in education.

On the one hand, nearly 90% of educators agree with to accommodate their diverse needs.

Education researchers like me, on the other, take a different view. While we generally agree that students have different learning needs, we tend to to learning styles because most individual studies have found .

Providing matched instruction to individual students involves a lot of , since teachers need to accurately identify each student’s learning style and then find or create customized materials for each student.

– in which students learn some lessons in one modality, such as text, and another lesson in a different one, such as videos – , though the on its benefits yet. In this method, students are exposed to a variety of modalities and learn to engage with all of them. But teachers don’t need to teach every lesson in different modalities to accommodate each individual student.

Multimodal instruction can also help reach students who don’t have a clear, singular learning style. Many of the studies in our meta-analysis did not include these students, so it is unclear how matched instruction would work for them.

What’s Next

It’s possible that students may learn more with matched instruction, not necessarily because that is their learning style, but rather because they have more skills in that particular modality, such as reading text versus comprehending audio. One reason they may be more skilled in one modality over another is simple preference. If a student prefers to read rather than listen to audio, they are likely to have practiced reading more than listening and are thus more skilled at it.

So the question is, are skills – even preferences – the same as learning styles? In future research, I plan to examine how skills in a particular modality relate to learning styles, disentangling these terms.

This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. Read the .

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