The Role Learning Plays: in The Practice Education Experience
The Role Learning Plays: in The Practice Education Experience
The Role Learning Plays: in The Practice Education Experience
Objectives
Understand the impact of personal learning style on learning in practice Understand and use the learning cycle to facilitate learning in students and strengthen your teaching techniques
Develop strategies to model and foster reflective activities to heighten student learning
Understand and integrate principles of adult learning within your preceptor experience
Slide 2 of 18
How Do We Learn
There is a vast amount of information available on learning style preferences. Many authors theorize there are four main ways in which people prefer to learn. Here are Hagberg and Leiders learning style descriptors: Enthusiastic: Starter of new activities Operates on a trial and error gut reaction Involves and inspires others Gets opinions and relies on them Seeks new experiences Likes risk; change incentives Dislikes routines Adapts well to new situations Willing to jump in Can be impulsive Likes learning through group doing discussion
Slide 6 of 18
How Do We Learn
Imaginative: Does not want to be oriented to the whole picture Uses eyes and ears and translates through imagination Good observer Can model behaviour well Able to see self in different situations Unhurried, casual, calm, friendly Avoids conflict Timing is important: cannot push or be pushed until ready Likes assurance from others Learns by listening then sharing ideas with a small number of people
Slide 6 of 18
How Do We Learn
Practical: Applies ideas/theories to solve problems in real life situations Has detective skills and the patience to search thoroughly Unemotional Uses reason and logic to meet goals and takes action Speculates on alternatives Likes to be in control Sets up projects likes the challenge of starting something new Acts independently, then gives feedback Responsible and reliable Learns by working alone
Slide 7 of 18
How Do We Learn
Logical:
Good theorist and planner Good synthesizer of detail Precise Thorough and careful Organized, follows a plan Process-oriented Reacts slowly and wants facts
Slide 8 of 18
Slide 9 of 18
Improving Learning
For optimal learning, we all need to be encouraged to adopt aspects of learning styles that differ from our preferred style. To help your student develop a learning style that is more ___ encourage him/her to Enthusiastic - take some risks (always with appropriate support), try something new, jump in occasionally rather than hold back Imaginative - think of alternative explanations or approaches to clinical problems or to look at the 'big' picture Practical - set specific goals for herself and her patients, and learn factual information that is necessary for the job Logical - take the time to plan and analyze, write down ideas and discuss them with you before acting upon them, develop sound rationale to support clinical decisions
Slide 10 of 18
How Do We Learn
Realizing our own learning style and considering the preferred style of who we are working with can help us work together more successfully. On the last page are a couple of links to learning style inventories. You might like to complete one or both of the inventories and/or have your students complete them. Sharing your results with each other might help you figure out how to best work with students to meet their learning needs.
Slide 11 of 18
Encourages a collaborative, rather than a competitive atmosphere in which learners and educators work and learn together
Remember:
To cherish the differences There is no best way to learn Learning styles are NOT related to intelligence or mental ability Learning styles are preferences that will surface under stress
Slide 12 of 18
Slide 13 of 18
Unconscious Competence
Slide 14 of 18
Be aware that:
Over time, practitioners tend not to think about the theoretical principles and steps that guide their work. They just do it. As a skilled clinician, you need to bridge the gap between your level of "unconscious competence" and your student's level of "unconscious incompetence." The best way to do this is by explaining to the student why you are doing what you are doing. Practitioners who are consciously competent are often very good teachers because they are able to explain the steps involved in a procedure or their clinical reasoning.
Slide 15 of 18
Retention
Remember that we retain: 10 % of what we read 20 % of what we hear 30 % of what we see 50 % of what we see and hear 70 % of what we say 90 % of what we say as we do something
Slide 16 of 18
In Summary
Understanding the impact of personal learning style on learning in practice is necessary for fostering an effective learning environment Awareness of the learning cycle will facilitate your understanding of where students are in the learning process and strengthen your teaching techniques Understanding the principles of adult learning may support your preceptor experience
Slide 17 of 18
inventories such as those linked below and sharing the results might help you and your students work better together. Soloman and Felders Index of Learning Styles Questionnaire Learning Style Inventory
Slide 18 of 18