Inclusive  Solutions Learning Styles and Dyslexia Screening 

           
           

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
   

 

What Practice Says about Research: A Review of “Should we be using Learning Styles? What research has to say about practice” by Frank Coffield et al (2004).

 

While reading this review of learning styles, I got the impression of a series of struggling living bodies strapped to the laboratory bench for dissection. You could be forgiven for thinking that the purpose of this review was not to understand a range of learning style approaches, but rather to debunk them under the cold hard glare of academic rigour (alongside the odd additional article in the press). This is a pity, since while I agree that the field is littered with sloppy thinking and inadequate research, we have a great deal more to gain from understanding the approaches than from attempting to destroy their credibility. I should, however, probably begin by admitting personal and professional interest. As Head of the Division of Dyslexia, Literacy and Learning Styles at the LLU+, London South Bank University, I cannot be considered impartial. Even more incriminating, I have created my own learning style approach and am mentioned in dispatches (as it were) in this review . However, paradoxically, this is a reason why I would agree with much of what this review argues. After all, I would not have taken the time and trouble to invent my own conceptualisation of learning styles and how to begin to identify them if I had been overwhelmingly impressed by any one of the many others.

When placing the 13 models singled out on the academic rack, a number of criticisms are applied across the range. However, some of these, are rather missing the point. For example, a central criticism is that very few of these models can be shown to have test re-test reliability. This is an important test for statistical analysis, but I will argue, much less important for learning styles. It is true that some models make claims about such reliability and it is only fair to test these claims. However, others do not. Indeed, one of my own misgivings, apparently shared by the reviewers, about most such tests, "tools", or "inventories" is that they are based on questionnaires and can therefore only provide a snapshot based on self awareness. I would argue that many learners, particularly those most vulnerable in an educational environment, have poor self-awareness about their learning styles, strengths and weaknesses. Consequently, it could be seen as a significant strength if their views changed during a learning style approach. Test, re-test reliability is therefore not a valid test of the effectiveness of a learning style approach. One might almost say the opposite. It depends on whether the initial test is intended to define the characteristic of a learning style, or to begin a process whereby the learner understands their learning style. In my view, the latter is an essential part of the approach and one that, in my experience, most teachers prefer. It is a process done with learners, not to them. It should not be merely a labelling process. However, I would agree with the review that many of the models intend it to be and this is always problematic.

The second major criticism, with which I would agree, is that many of the approaches fail to be clear, or disagree, about what the consequences of such initial assessments should be. For example, some argue that it is important to develop areas of weakness identified in the learning style "inventory", others that it is important to use strengths to compensate for weaknesses. Others that awareness itself leads to better learning (or teaching). My own view is that working with strengths is always more effective than working on weaknesses, but that initial impressions of what these are need to be tested through learning activities. The review is critical of approaches which “limit” the learning to preferred styles. Again, this is missing an important part of the learning process involved here. It is important to start with your preferred approach before addressing the learning through less preferred approaches. Many learning style practitioners argue that information is best received through the individual’s preferred learning style. It is a question of order, rather than limitation. Getting this right is empowering, getting it wrong can be devastating for the learner, particularly for those most vulnerable in our educational institutions. However, all that matters in the end is that learning (as well as teaching) becomes self-reflective and therefore more capable of improvement.

Tied to this criticism, is the underlying critique, that learning styles approaches decontextualise learning from social structure and the forces of socio-economic background. Again, this criticism is somewhat misplaced, as this can be levelled at almost any pedagogic approach. It was very interesting to see Bernstein presented as a comparison. I worked with Bernstein in the 1970’s as a Ph.D student. Indeed it was my suggestion that his conceptual tools of “classification” and “framing” could be used beyond the analysis of pedagogic practice to an analysis of social class itself. It was this, if I say so myself, which enabled Bernstein to develop a theoretical framework that was capable of analysing pedagogy within the context of social structure, power and control. However, this was a theoretical perspective and not based on research evidence. Indeed, I would suggest that a research review of the evidence would be even more problematic than this has proved to be for learning styles. Nevertheless, as a sociologist, I would agree that it is extremely important to recognise that socio-economic background remains a pivotal concept in understanding the learning experience. We know, for example, that despite massive expansion in the HE sector, the percentage of students from lower socio-economic background has changed not at all in the last 50 years. This is a fundamental failure of widening participation of epic proportions. No-one has discovered a method of changing this. However, I would argue that a (generic) learning styles approach offers fresh hope that we can challenge this social determinism.

My argument runs like this. IQ tests correlate with socio-economic background because that is precisely what they tend to measure. However, as teachers, our expectations of individual learners remain constrained by our perception of “fixed ability”. There is plenty of evidence to demonstrate that students we believe have high ability are consequently successful, those we believe have low ability tend not to be. However, a learning styles approach offers a way out of this mental cul-de-sac. It offers an alternative explanation that failure is a result of a mismatch between learning style and teaching strategy. In my experience, once teachers experience a single learner, that somewhere in their hearts they had written off, suddenly blossoming due to a small change in their teaching strategy, they can never explain low achievement as low ability again. Something changes at a very fundamental level in their perceptions that a mere intellectual argument cannot begin to challenge. I would also argue that once a learner experiences the difference between successful and unsuccessful learning, and recognises why this has occurred, they can never continue to be passive recipients of knowledge again either. Consequently, despite this review's criticism that learning style approaches are apolitical, I would argue that they can have a radicalising effect of unparalleled proportions. Particularly when those from "non-traditional" backgrounds might be more vulnerable to the mismatch between learning style and teaching strategy than middle class learners.

Part of applying academic rigour and analysis to the range of learning styles models is to ask such questions as how can we know that any effect of an intervention is caused by what we think (or believe) it to be caused by? Questions such as these are useful academic questions. They are less useful to practitioners who merely want to make a difference and are unperturbed by what factor is the most significant. Career academics work on the principle of critical analysis and subjecting the evidence to scrutiny and ensuring that conclusions drawn are beyond reasonable doubt. To do otherwise is to “lack rigour” and make themselves vulnerable in the competitive world of academia. Practitioners are trying to do something substantially different. They are trying to make a difference on the basis of the balance of evidence. In short, they need to take risks. To extend the legal metaphor, the problem with this review is that practitioners feel like they are being told they are guilty until proved innocent. This does not lead to research based practice, but the application of “safe solutions”.

It would be very interesting to see a research review of “chalk and talk”, for example, and compare the results. It seems to me that almost any “research review” of specific teaching methods will provide very little evidence that it works. As practitioners we have to compare these strategies and make choices. In this context the review highlights the importance of feedback. Few teachers would disagree with this. However, I would argue that a learning styles approach can, for example, make the feedback more effective by making it more meaningful to a wider range of learners. Almost all practitioners blend a range of strategies and approaches. My experience is that a learning styles approach can make this more coherent and focused for both the teacher and the learner.

Another problem with the review is that in its apparent desire to discredit learning styles, it occasionally overstates the case that can be made from the evidence (or lack of it). For example, it criticises the research undertaken by the LLU+ (before my time) claiming that there was no benefit to the intervention group. This is incorrect. There was a disappointingly small, but statistically significant benefit. This was particularly significant when it was discovered that the intervention groups had a much higher percentage of ESOL learners than the control groups. In these circumstances we would not have been surprised if the intervention groups would have done less well than the control groups. Moreover, the qualitative evidence was extremely positive. Students made many statements such as:
“…it was different this time, it was good fun.”

“It makes you remember stuff more easily (than writing)… when you do it for yourself you just remember it more than copying it down.”

“…I learn from the group when I won’t forget but the teacher teaching most of it I forget the content.”

Teachers comments included:
“They appear to be in general more motivated and enthusiastic when their learning styles are being catered for.”

“It shows that it actually works when they have been able to take in that information.”

“…It’s a slightly more complex task but they actually seemed to grasp it….”

“I was really impressed with them today, I really was….”

“F is quite weak and I was surprised…(she) made the most progress in the group.”

“I was really pleased in the end….even the weaker ones…produced quite a bit in a written summary and did it quite well.”

“Relationships notably improve.”

These are not insignificant findings.

Learning style practitioners rarely publish their research and this can leave too little to review. I would suggest that it is likely that most of the “best” practice is at FE level, while most of the “best” research is done at HE level. However, it is a new and burgeoning area of practice and research and there is much more to be done. My own (unpublished) screening of students at New College, University of Southampton included indicators of socio-economic background, academic skills and learning/cognitive styles. A factor analysis concluded that 47% of the variance of academic achievement could be explained by the strength of preference for thinking visually or verbally (about twice the apparent predictive power of socio-economic background). One of the difficulties of analysing the relationship between learning styles and social class at HE level is that so few from lower socio-economic background can be found in HE. The samples become too small. Consequently, if for no other reason, we need more research in the FE sector. Indeed, we need to encourage more practice and better funded research into learning styles so that we can get to the bottom of extremely exciting practice from a research perspective.

Like these reviewers I would agree that there are problems of inadequate methodology, commercial interests, inconsistencies and ill-conceived models and methods of identification. It is also full of invention, imagination, excitement, hope and new possibilities in what can only be described as a rather tired educational arena that has failed to challenge the self-fulfilling prophecies of educational failure for learners from lower socio-economic backgrounds. In this context, it is essential that such “reviews” are not allowed to discredit the approach. We need more invention and risk taking as well as better research to unlock our education systems.

Dr Ross Cooper, Assistant Director, LLU+, Head of Dyslexia, Literacy and Learning Styles Division, London South Bank University.