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The Meta-Learning Series: Is This Your Style?

6/18/2015

18 Comments

 
PictureReflect upon what you learn and capsulize it.
#2: Learn-to-Learn (Part 1 – Active and Reflective Learning Techniques)

After figuring out your learning-style last week, it’s time to learn the different techniques that work best for you.

*Note – Techniques used by each style can work and be useful to the other styles. Just because one may statistically be better for one does not mean it won’t work for you. Try them all and experiment a little.


Active Learner Techniques

If you are an active learner and you’re creating your own class or in a class that doesn’t meet your needs, then these are some specific techniques that work with your brain chemistry.

1.       Find a way to discuss the subject with others.

This could be anyone, but it is preferable to have someone who knows as much as you do and has an interest in the subject, or is a subject matter expert. This could be someone who studies it themselves or is a professional in the business. The key is to find someone who you can talk with who can expand what you’re studying as well as put it in a realistic perspective of how it works in practice.

A key provision of this strategy is finding a mentor who will consistently work with you to expand your knowledge as you learn the practice of what you’re trying to learn. Mentors are the most important and effective way to learn a subject and make it applicable to the real world. It should be utilized by all learning styles.

2.      Create a Problem Solving Activity

Look for ways you can apply your new knowledge. This entails looking how to use it in your everyday life or artificially creating a situation where you could use it. This could be doing an already created activity (From the Internet) or creating and running your own experiment to verify the information (Also from the Internet).

Good Example:


A good example of this is if you wanted to learn to trade stocks. You could actually trade stocks or you could use free web programs that give you fake money to trade on the real stock exchange so you can learn and test your own abilities and strategies.

3.      Use what you learn.

The final and best way to learn something is to actually do it. This entails going out and doing it. Go to a place where you can use your knowledge and practice what you learned.

Public Speaking = Toastmasters International Club

Engineering = Build a shed

Programming = Design a program that solves a problem you have

Business management = Start a Business

Etc. = etc.

Just do the hands-on work and you as an active learner will succeed.

Reflective Learner Techniques

If you are a reflective learner and you’re creating your own class or in a class that doesn’t meet your needs, then these are some specific techniques that work best with your mental inclinations.

1.       Figure out your optimal ratio of learning to breaking.

Reflective learners are notorious for having gestation periods where they need to take the information and let it develop and settle. These can take anywhere from a few minutes to a few days.

The key here is to find out how long your gestation period is by experimenting with your own mind. Meaning you research the information and try to learn it. Then take a break to find out how long it takes to digest the information. You can find out your best combination of learning to digesting by choosing to learn something for a certain amount of time and then measuring how long it takes before you know it.

A Good Example:

Study for an hour. Break for an hour. See what you remember.

Repeat using 2 hours of study to 1 hour of breaking.

Repeat using any combination of times until you find your optimal learning to digesting ratio.

2.      Find a good place or activity that helps you learn and gestate.

Where do you learn most comfortable?

Is it at home? A coffee shop? Or library?

Where do gestate the best and retain the most information you learn?

Learn best by finding the place your most comfortable but not easily distracted.

3.      Think of possible questions or applications of what you learn as you learn.

While you think and gestate the information you learn, you need to make connections between what you learned to what you will learn by thinking up questions you have of what you did learn and what you hope to learn in the next bout of learning. This helps connect the information to your mind, storyboarding it.

Another technique is to think of ways you could apply this information to the real world and what you do on a regular basis. This will help cement the information to concrete examples.

4.      Write summaries (How-To Lists) of what you learn in your own words.

Having reflective traits myself, this blog is the epitome of this technique. Taking in new information, learning it, applying it to gain experience, and then finally writing a blog about it to show my understanding. This is the basis of what all reflective learners must do. 



If we didn't cover your learning style this week. No worries. All will be covered in good time.


Next Week:

#2: Learn-to-Learn (Part 2 – Sequential and Global Learning Techniques)



See you then.


18 Comments

The Meta-Learning Series: Do you know your Learning-Style?

6/11/2015

19 Comments

 
Picture
#1: Figure-Out your learning style.

If no free class exists, it’s time to build your own.

But before you do, you have to know what your learning-style is.

Because if you don’t, you could be finding learning tools that are useless to you because you don’t learn in that particular way.

A good example is people who learn hands-on versus people who learn conceptually.  People who learn conceptually like to use graphs, figures, maps, and other tools to learn a concept, and will tell hands-on people that that is the only way to learn. Whereas hands-on people like to see how something is done with the help of another person to show them what’s right. Finding out what type you are is important to your learning success and completing your own self-study.

To find out your learning style take these two questionnaires and combine them to see what styles best compliment you.

1.       The Vark Quiz  – Short Form with quick summary of your learning-style

2.       Index of Learning Styles Questionnaire – Long Form with in-depth analysis of your learning style

After you take these quick questionnaires. You will find out if your learning-style is active or reflective, sensing or intuitive, visual or sensing, and sequential or global.

With each of these styles comes specific techniques that work best with that type of learner as well as others that work with all. That will be covered in later. Now let’s go over each style of learner and their strengths and weaknesses.

1st Spectrum of 4 that details how you like to learn.

Does this sound like YOU?

                Don’t like to be lectured?

                Hate being forced to sit there without any active participation?

Then you have active learner tendencies. Because active learners like learning to be participative and interesting. Which is why you will have a kid who can remember every stat and name of his favorite baseball team, but can’t will never remember anything about the state capitals. Because one is active and can be discussed with friends while the other is taught dryly with no entertainment value.

 Or does this sound like you?                                            

                Don’t like when other people talk during lectures? Or when you’re studying?

                Hate every time someone asks a question or slows down the class?

Then you have reflective tendencies. Being the opposite of active learners. You don’t want people to interrupt your process of listening, thinking, and digesting of information. Where an active learner wants to use the information immediately, a reflective learners wants to reflect upon the information and use it later.
                                                                                                                                               

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2nd Spectrum of 4 that details how you like to learn.

Does this sound like you?

          Like to memorize?

          Learning facts and figures?

          While using the techniques you have always used?

          Not liking when things get outside your scope?

          Then you’re a sensor. You like repetition, memorization, and well established methods, formulas, and procedures             that work so you don’t have to think. You enjoy things that already work with no problems and issues that you               can reuse again and again on old and new situations.  

Or does this sound like you?

          Like challenging new problems?

          With the ability to think outside the box to find new solutions?

          Then you are an intuitive learner. You enjoy taking on new challenges and enjoy figuring them out, both their               problems and solution. Even if either haven’t been figured out yet. Intuitive learners learn usually conceptually               and theoretically. 



Picture
3rd Spectrum of 4 that details how you like to learn.

Does this sound like you?

          Like to learn by actually seeing something done?

          Not told, but physically shown from A to Z?

          Then you’re a visual learner. And the reality is. Most people are. Visual   learners learn by seeing How-To Videos,             on-the-job training, and flowcharts, graphs, and other visuals that help implant images to memory.

Or does this sound like you?

          Do you learn by reading and writing?

          Without having to be shown how to do it, but told?

          Then you are a verbal learner. Verbal learners are able to understand how to do things by reading how others did           it or being told how they did, and independent from having to actually being shown how to do it. Entailing they               are better at figuring out the minute details that may not be as explicit as seeing how it is done. 


Picture
4th Spectrum of 4 that details how you like to learn.

Does this sound like you?        

          Like to learn step-by-step? In a logical sequence?

          Each step building on the next until it all finally makes sense?

          If you do, you are a sequential learner. This type of learner loves step-by-step processes and                   learns logically by learning the basics and fundamentals of a subject. Building upon the subject by             stacking new information on top of each other until the whole picture is known.

Or does this sound like you?

          Like to immerse yourself in the information?

          Learning randomly until you have that “eureka” moment?

          Then you are most likely a global learner. Someone who likes to learn everything about a subject,           but in no particular order until one day it all clicks together and you master the subject. The major           difference between the two is that sequential learners are able to use the information relatively               immediately to take a test while it takes a global learner a certain period of time to let it                       conceptualize before they can effectively take a test on it. Because the information doesn’t make             any sense to you until it clicks in your mind.  


Picture
Conclusion

But like every spectrum, everyone has more and less the tendencies of each type. As many people display both. It just matters which way you lean more and knowing the best ways to take advantage of your own combination of learning styles to maximize your learning return to become a meta-learner.

For example:

             An active/reflective learner may like to participate in group work to get feedback from others in the group, but                want to do their own work alone and bring it to the group roughly completed.

             A sensing/intuitive learner is someone who likes to use established-methods to figure out problems, but likes to              change-it-up to see if the established method can be made better.

             A visual/verbal learner may learn best by combining both words and pictures so they can read the steps as they              see them being done. Helping them learn that much faster.

             And finally, a sequential/global learner may be able to learn sequentially, but only if each presented topic is fully              discussed without pieces missing.

Now check us out next week when we take what we have learned so far and use it to find the best learning techniques that will work for your particular learning-style.

Labeled…

          #2: Learn-to-Learn: A Guide to Find the Best Techniques for Your Learning-Style.

Best,

L. Thomas


Reference for Learning Styles:

http://www4.ncsu.edu/unity/lockers/users/f/felder/public/ILSdir/styles.htm

19 Comments

The Meta-Learning Series: Do you know how to learn?

6/4/2015

16 Comments

 
Picture



Education is becoming very, very expensive. 

Even worse, it is not actually teaching any viable job skills that the workplace wants.

As for most jobs you’re hired for; require on the job training and have nothing to do with the degree you have.

               



                A good example is my friend, Mike. Mike got his degree in Geology.
                After he graduated, do you know what his position was?
                He became a software salesman. Selling software to small and large business.

This is why formal education is becoming less valuable. The only caveat to this is if the school has a great reputation that will get you somewhere, but then you’re just paying for the school’s brand and not the education.

Which is why self-study and building your very own classes is to the utmost importance in this day of age.

As the truth is, no one will educate you unless it directly benefits them. Big Education will only do it if they can sap cash or student loans out of you. Branded Education will only let you in if they think you are “worthy” or have a rich parent who can add a wing to the school. And Private Schools want your first-born child as payment while teaching information that is just not useful for work. While also not having the reputation to get you anywhere because hiring managers stigmatize it and refuse to acknowledge it as a legitimate source of education.

That is why self-education is more important as the most successful people I know, from millionaires, CEOs, and entrepreneurs are not “formally educated”, but instead self-studied by reading books that told them how to be successful and then going out and doing it in real life, not the academic world.  

That is why today I am bringing you the META-LEARNING SERIES, which will teach you the set-up on how to learn any subject on your own by building a customized class that uses your learning-style and schedule.

Step #0: Make sure that a free class doesn’t already exist

For this step, research the internet or library to find out if someone already created a practical class for the subject you want to learn.

A good example of this is when I wanted to learn how to type. Instead of taking a paid class, buying a book, or even practicing; I researched the internet to find a free website that teaches you how to type; taking you from a beginner to an expert.

After finding this website, I set my schedule of learning to an hour a day (2-3 lessons on the site) and practiced over and over. In just a few short weeks, I was typing like a computer hacker and increased my words per minute by 500%.

All because I did a little research before I moved forward.

If you’re interested in learning more about places to get free classes and education, here are 2 websites that have compiled 100’s of websites that may cover what you’re interested in knowing using class formats, videos, lectures, and even free e-books.

1.       Formal FREE University Education

2.       Informal Courses with Course Building Blocks 



Check us out next week for... 


STEP #1: How to Figure Out Your Learning-Style.


16 Comments

    Author

    Lucas Thomas, professional writer, entrepreneur, and business owner. 

    Blogs to keep others up-to-date on new ways to develop your writing, business, or time. 



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Lucas Thomas.
 
Professional Writer. 
        +
Professional Editor.
         =  Professional  Copy.

        
    
                 I have been a professional writer for the last five years. Never thinking to become one until after receiving my very first writing project from my friend.
                 I didn't even want to do it because I didn't have the time. But as the story goes, he made me an offer I couldn't refuse. And on that day I fell into a job I knew would become my career.

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