Don’t worry if your kid doodles while revising, or fiddles with his pen. Eveline Gan finds out how to use his innate learning style to help him study better.
Is it better to write down notes, make flashcards, watch educational videos or read out loud when revising school work?
The truth is, every child learns differently. There is no “good” or “bad” way to do it, shares Lee Sue Lynn, academic director for the Early Years and lower primary programmes at The Learning Lab.
Part of it has to do with your kid’s personality and lifestyle.
“If we consider the range of personalities among children, surely it is logical to look at each child’s learning profile as unique, too,” she explains.
Figuring out how your kid learns best and playing up his strengths can make a huge difference. Researchers say that children acquire and retain knowledge better when they learn in their preferred learning style, she says.
A word of caution: Avoid pigeonholing your kid’s learning style and demand that he learns only in one way, she warns.
“Just as you would not eat your favourite hamburger for every meal, a child will not study in the same way every day, too. The point is to identify your child’s preferred learning style to enable him to customise his learning environment or tools, so that he gets the most out of it,” she says.
With that in mind, Sue Lynn rounds up four main learning styles and shares smart study tips for each one.
1 THE VISUAL LEARNER
Does your kid like making notes, drawing or doodling? Does he zoom in on illustrations in his textbook? Visual learners are motivated by what they see.
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