http://www.nea.org/lessons/tt070806.html
Teaching Theme of the Week
Use an online inventory to determine students' learning strengths and intelligences.
Subjects: all subjects
Grade Levels: K-2, 3-5, 6-8, 9-12
Objectives Students will:
- take an online inventory to determine their learning strengths and weaknesses,
- create graphs to show their learning strengths. (optional),
- build self-esteem by learning about their personal learning strengths,
- learn about areas where they might need to work harder, and
- learn to appreciate differences among their classmates.
Materials Needed
- one or more of the online resources listed below
- paper and supplies for creating graphs to show learning strengths
An inventory of students' learning styles can build self-esteem by helping them discover their strengths; learn about areas in which they might need to make more effort; and appreciate the differences among themselves.
Published inventories are readily available to help teachers and students determine their learning strengths. You also can find some excellent free resources online:
What's Your Learning Style?Students can take this inventory online. (Set aside a time for each student to complete the inventory at a classroom computer, or have the entire class complete the inventory during computer lab time.) Students can print the report, which shows whether they are stronger visual, auditory, or tactile learners.
For younger students, you might create a printed inventory that provides each of the 30 prompts in this activity. Beneath each statement, type the four possible responses -- very little like me; a little like me; like me; or a lot like me -- so students can circle the one that applies to them. Then you or a helper can input student responses into the online form and print a report for each student.
How Many Ways Are You Smart? ( PDF, 12K, 1pg.)This simple printable (pdf) page provides an easy tool for discovering which of eight intelligences students favor. Students can do the activity on their own by simply folding the inventory sheet in half and making a checkmark next to each of the 24 statements that describe them. Then, they unfold the paper and tally the results. Be sure students share the results with you!
Multiple Intelligences InventoryIf you're looking for a more in-depth MI inventory, this one provides ten statements that relate to each of nine intelligences. Students identify the statements that describe them as learners. They then tally and graph the results on their own. If you're looking for additional statements related to each of the intelligences, you might use the Web page What Are My Learning Strengths?
You might also share with students some of what the inventory means. The Multiple Intelligences Kids' Page offers some kid-friendly explanations.
With older students, you might want to turn this activity into a research project in which they research "multiple intelligences" and learn more about the intelligence(s) they favor.
You also can learn more about a teacher who has used learning inventories in the classroom in the Education World article Your Students: No Two Are Alike
Those are just a few of the many resources you'll find online that can help you (and your students) learn more about the learning styles your they favor. Following are some additional resources:
- Abiator's Online Learning Styles Inventory
- Multiple Intelligences Self-Inventory (Scroll to "multiple intelligences animation" and click.)
- Multiple Intelligences: Find Your Strengths
Note: The informal inventories above represent only a small sampling of the available tools; the results should not be used as a sole measure of students' learning strengths or abilities.
Assessment Students share (in words, pictures, or writing -- depending on their learning strengths) what they learned about how they learn.
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