A Reflection on the Principles of Learning Styles

Article


Taylor, B. 2025. A Reflection on the Principles of Learning Styles . Patterns of Practice. 1 (1), p. In press.
AuthorsTaylor, B.
Abstract

The Core Content Framework (DFE, 2019) sets down the foundational knowledge that trainee teachers in England should acquire during their initial teacher education. In this document, in the adaptive teaching section, it states that:

There is a common misconception that pupils have distinct and identifiable learning styles. This is not supported by evidence and attempting to tailor lessons to learning styles is unlikely to be beneficial. (pp. 20-21)

This position presents a significant diversion from approaches to pedagogy, in all age phases and contexts, in the 1990s and 2000s, when identifying and catering to learners’ preferred learning styles was recognised as good practice. In many cases teachers would support students to identify themselves as either visual, auditory or kinaesthetic learners (Dunn & Dunn, 1992; 1993) but this was just one of many categorisations. Indeed, Given & Reid (1999) inventoried over 100 different learning style instruments (e.g., Gregorc’s Mind Styles Delineator (1985), Honey & Mumford’s Learning Styles Questionnaire (1992), Kolb’s Learning Styles Inventory (1999), Jackson’s Learning Styles Profiler (2002) and Sternberg’s Thinking Styles Inventory (1999) are among the most well-known). These varied in how learners were classified: some were linked to fixed elements of personality, others were more flexibly related to learner preference. However, they all, in some way, indicated that pedagogy would be made more effective by diagnosing learning styles, encouraging learners to reflect on these styles in an age-appropriate way, and then designing teaching and learning activities around them. This paper revisits some of the underlying principles of learning styles and provides a reflection on their potential value to educators, and learners, by considering which of these elements are pedagogically impactful, while acknowledging the limitations of learning styles as a whole.

JournalPatterns of Practice
Journal citation1 (1), p. In press
ISSN3050-2381
3050-239X
Year2025
PublisherDepartment of Education, School of Childhood and Social Care and the Centre for Excellence in Learning and Teaching (CELT), University of East London
Accepted author manuscript
License
File Access Level
Repository staff only
Web address (URL)https://www.uel.ac.uk/our-research/patterns-practice
Publication process dates
AcceptedMar 2025
Deposited16 Jun 2025
Copyright holder© 2025 The Author
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