Kolb’s leaning cycle
Kolb's experiential learning style theory is typically represented by a four-stage learning cycle in which the learner 'touches all the bases

1. Concrete
Experience - a new experience or situation is encountered, or a
reinterpretation of existing experience.
2. Reflective
Observation of the New Experience - of particular importance
are any inconsistencies between experience and understanding.
3. Abstract
Conceptualization reflection gives rise to a new idea, or a
modification of an existing abstract concept (the person has learned from their
experience).
4. Active
Experimentation - the learner applies their idea(s) to the
world around them to see what happens.
Learning Styles
Kolb's
learning theory (1974) sets out four distinct learning styles, which are based
on a four-stage learning cycle (see above). Kolb explains that different people
naturally prefer a certain single different learning style.
Various
factors influence a person's preferred style. For example, social
environment, educational experiences, or the basic cognitive structure of the
individual.
Whatever
influences the choice of style, the learning style preference itself is
actually the product of two pairs of variables, or two separate 'choices' that
we make, which Kolb presented as lines of an axis, each with 'conflicting'
modes at either end
A typical presentation of Kolb's two continuums is that the
east-west axis is called the Processing Continuum (how
we approach a task), and the north-south axis is called the Perception Continuum (our
emotional response, or how we think or feel about it).
reference-https://www.simplypsychology.org/learning-kolb.html

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ReplyDeleteAt Wentworth Institute of Technology, experiential learning is central to our education philosophy and journey to become nationally recognized as the university of choice for EPIC Learning. David Kolb’s Experiential Learning Cycle is a great model for Wentworth to make sense of learning through experience! We invite you to explore Kolb's Experiential Learning Cycle and Kolb's Learning Styles.
ReplyDeleteClearly explained the topic. Good job.
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