Content area

Abstract

Students have different levels of motivation, different attitudes about teaching and learning, and different responses to specific classroom environments and instructional practices. The more thoroughly instructors understand the differences, the better chance they have of meeting the diverse learning needs of all of their students. Three categories of diversity that have been shown to have important implications for teaching and learning are differences in students' learning styles (characteristic ways of taking in and processing information), approaches to learning (surface, deep, and strategic), and intellectual development levels (attitudes about the nature of knowledge and how it should be acquired and evaluated). This article reviews models that have been developed for each of these categories, outlines their pedagogical implications, and suggests areas for further study. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

Keywords: learning styles, approaches to learning, intellectual development

Details

Title
Understanding Student Differences
Author
Felder, Richard M; Brent, Rebecca
Pages
57-72
Publication year
2005
Publication date
Jan 2005
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd.
ISSN
10694730
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
217960231
Copyright
Copyright American Society for Engineering Education Jan 2005