Learning Styles Are a Myth — Use Multiple Channels Instead
The idea that you're fundamentally a "visual learner" or an "auditory learner" is one of the most persistent myths in education. Decades of research have failed to find evidence that matching teaching to someone's supposed style improves outcomes. People have preferences, yes — but preferences aren't the same as optimal learning pathways. You might enjoy listening more than reading, but that doesn't mean listening alone is how you learn best.
What actually works is engaging multiple channels at once. Read the material, then explain it out loud. Draw a diagram, then write a summary. Watch the video and then do the exercise. Each channel encodes the information differently, and the overlap creates stronger, more resilient memory. Instead of narrowing your approach to one style, deliberately use as many senses and methods as possible. The more ways your brain encounters an idea, the deeper it sticks.
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