After attending David Rock's
superb NeuroLeadership Conference at UCLA last month I
completed a guide to be
published in January, 2010 entitled:
"I'm really listening even if
I'm not looking at you:
How our brains work
with our senses"
I wrote
the guide to remind us all that people may be learning
when we think they are not. It is a plea to let us all
use what we know helps us to learn best. What kids do
may not look the way their parents and teachers do
things. All people do not learn in the same way, at the
same rate and at the same time. As long as they can
learn, kids and adults should have the time to lower
their anxiety in stressful situations like tests. In my
years of teaching, I found that untimed tests showed
abilities that timed (“power”) tests did not.
Some teachers and
psychologists who read the draft of this guide said that
“learning styles” or “learning modalities” were no
longer of interest to these professions. They said that
these had been supplanted by new ways of learning since
learning styles are only “preferences” and not important
at home and in the classroom. However, learning
preferences have not disappeared. The interaction of our
brain’s preferences with our senses, guides our lives.
It’s true that people may
have a preference for learning yet are able to learn in
ways that are not their preferences. In the major path
to learning for them, school, they may feel that they
are not competent. Their insecurity may stop them from
learning when they are presented with approaches they
have to struggle with. We have an interesting focus in
schools. The goal of teaching is often seen as packing
in information to pass tests. Students need to develop
the ways they learn as well. The hope with this guide is
to encourage students to be responsible for finding
their own ways to learn at school.
Please understand that we
all develop our non-preferred ways of learning over
time. As adults, we may work most of the time in a
non-preferred way. Yes it’s harder for us. We learn
and adapt. Amazingly, we can learn and improve at any
age! For instance, even though we may prefer to learn
by doing, we can read the instructions.
I wrote the guide to
ensure that the readers understand that the way we learn
and communicate is not about intelligence, but about the
many ways of learning and doing. The myth that people
who learn quickly and early, or do well on tests, are
smarter has to be corrected.
After others looked at
this guide and asked questions about how adults learn, I
added a section on how brain preferences affect our
everyday choices at home and at work.
My intent is that this
guide will be helpful to all ages but especially to
parents and teachers.
The background for the
guide to be published shortly is the following:
In 2009, I volunteered in
a public school in Houston. Intending to guide the
students in their presentation skills a couple of hours
a visit, I learned that they were an interesting bunch
of kids. Based on a quick check of their learning
preferences, their most preferred way of learning and
doing was Kinesthetic/Moving. I found this out by asking
them to tell me about their home life as I looked at
their eye movements. This is one of the techniques from
Neuro Linguistic Programming, NLP.
We talked about how
famous people expressed themselves. They loved talking
about President Obama’s hand movements and Clint
Eastwood’s tough physical stance and short sentences.
While I was addressing the class, the teacher
respectfully asked the students to look at me when I
spoke. I then asked the kids to do whatever it took to
be able to hear what I was saying.
Many people know how to
talk about the three different brain approaches to
learning. What they may not notice is how auditory,
kinesthetic and visual brains are misunderstood. Since
I wanted to get a clear explanation for the different
ways we learn, I looked for a good book on Neuro
Linguistic Programming, NLP, to explain what I was
seeing in their eye movements. I bought all the kids a
couple of different books but the books did not help
them understand what was happening. The kids knew what
worked for them. So I talked with the kids.
As kids in the class
looked everywhere but at me, I asked the kids what
worked best for them to pay attention to someone
talking. We all talked about how twirling hair, lying
down, moving around and playing with an electronic game
HELPED
rather than hurt being able to listen. The preferred
(favorite) ways of learning for these kids were
Kinesthetic/Moving or Visual/Seeing. Since they were
told to listen
to me to hear
what I was saying, they had to use either a second or
third way of learning which they did not prefer. Thus,
if they move something, that part of their brain is kept
busy and another part which uses hearing
is able to focus.
Help Your Brain Focus
Sometimes by keeping your
second or third preferred way of learning and doing
busy, you can help your other senses focus. Have you
noticed how many people like to work while listening to
music on their iPods or the radio? Sometimes, if you
keep parts of your brain busy you can help other parts
of your brain work better on focus. Certain types of
music seem to work better than others. Not only kids,
but also adults, are criticized for listening to music
while doing something else.
Some
Auditory/Hearing-First people learn best by listening to
spoken words. While listening to the spoken word they
can work on the computer, which is visual(looking at the screen)
and movement oriented (typing the keys), which may be
their second and third ways of learning and doing. To
accommodate those who are not Visual/Seeing-First, it’s
probably best that the important information appear
first, or on a separate email, so that they can truly
“see” all of what’s important.
In this guide we will
look at how different parts of our brains relate to work
and school. Story telling and language learning are
related to the Auditory/Hearing part of the brain.
Sports and handwriting are both related to movement thus
are part of the Kinesthetic/Movingpart of the brain.
Spelling and reading are largely supported bythe Visual/Seeing part of
the brain.
What does it mean to “Pay
Attention” when you’re in school?
Most of what we learn in
the world is overwhelmingly visual. That may be why many
people dislike voice mail. There is research that 20% of
those who have it check it just once a month. Texting,
“tweeting” and emailing win. What takes 7 seconds to
read can take 79 seconds to hear. In our fast-paced,
heavily visual world, auditory can take a back seat.
All around us are
pictures on television, movies, the internet and
advertising. It’s estimated that between 80-90% of what
we learn in school and at home is visual. When we were
young, we “learned by doing” when we learned how to
dress, brush our teeth and eat. You may learn by doing
in a technical setting like an apprenticeship program.
However, most of the time you are reading words and
pictures, and looking at information, in order to learn.
Lots of teachers are
visual learners. They have also learned that the polite
way to be in the world is more of a visual approach.
“Look” at people when you’re talking with them. “Pay
attention” usually means looking at the teacher or your
parent. Looking and seeing are visual.
Below are some of the
ways that we stay focused to learn as a result of our
preferred ways of learning: Auditory/Listening,
Kinesthetic/Moving,and Visual/Seeing.These are all the kinds
of things that you do that may annoy teachers, parents,
and even other kids. These are real behaviors for both
kids and grown ups.
The behaviors fall into
categories according to what someone prefers when they
are learning. Usually, it’s our brain’s favorite ways of
learning that often guides us to focus to learn by doing
these things.
We’re lucky that we now
have movement-related learning available around the
clock with computers, email and texting.
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