I can see that all learning styles work for all people, but the idea that there's not some people who receive learning better under different styles seems really unlikely, and thus needing very strong proof.
Doing pottery teaching I definitely would say that students split in to those who one could simply explain to, and others who needed to see it done, and others that wanted something diagrammatic but could grasp without necessarily seeing the specific actions. I always approached the learning tasks the same way and relied on the students (all ages) to lead me, and transformed the style according to the group: so this is a fascinating result to me. The students never said "oh I'm a X-style learner" (eg "I'm a visual learner") so it seems unlikely to me that they were demanding a learning style because of a false pre-conception of themselves. It could be that there was a range of intelligence, and that those who were more "intelligent" could do the 3D mental manipulations/visualisations to grasp the concepts, and so didn't need images/demonstrations ... but that would still be different sorts of people having different educational styles that benefited them more.
Anyone reference some more, readable, developments of this concept over the last couple of years since the result was announced?
>"So most students are not employing study strategies that mesh with self-reported learning preferences, and the minority who do show no academic benefit. Although students believe that learning preferences influence performance, this research affirms the mounting evidence that they do not, even when students are mastering information on their own. These findings suggest a general lack of student awareness about the processes and behaviors that support effective learning. Consistent with this notion, Hussman and O’Loughlin also found negative correlations between many of the common study strategies reported by students (e.g., making flashcards, use of outside websites) and course performance. Thus regardless of individual learning style or the alignment of the style with study techniques, many students are adopting strategies that simply do not support comprehension and retention of information." (https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/the-problem-with-...) //
One of the most intelligent guys at my Uni (way back!) always used flash-cards (spaced repetition); are they saying that's a very poor way for _all_ people to learn. He must have been even more of a genius (I think he got the top marks in the Chem exams, at what was then the 3rd top Uni in the UK) than I imagined.
The fact that students didn't adapt their learning to their perceived style of learning doesn't mean they weren't learning better from the stuff that matched "their style".
A very muddled bunch of assumptions in that article.
I took a MooC by the same title a while back. It was a good class.