I had the interesting experience today of filling out the Kolb Learning 
Style Inventory, homework for my university teaching course. You answer 12 
questions, and it gives you a readout on where you are along four learning 
style dimensions. These are Active Experimentation, Active 
Experimentation, Reflective observation, and Concrete experience. From 
there they show how different combinations of strengths in these areas 
make up different overall learning styles.
I only half buy this stuff (mindful of the Barnum effect and the often 
unearned authority of things that have numbers attached to them), but it 
has been a valuable experience calculating my own score and seeing what it 
can say about me - as well as the alternatives to the way I learn. I turn 
out to be a highly Converging learner, because of my Active 
Experimentation and Abstract Conceptualization. Especially the latter was 
really high, the result of ranking highly statements such as "When I learn 
I like ideas and theories" and "When I am learning I am a logical person". 
(big surprise)
Somewhat disturbingly, this learning style is thought to work best in 
highly technical professions like economics, engineering and computer 
science. The learning style of the scientist and mathematician is more 
Assimilating (Reflective observation and Abstract Conceptualization) Could 
knowing this help me to become more comfortable and affective as a 
scientist, by developing my more Assimilitating side?
I recommend you give this a try if you have the chance. I feel that not 
only will it help me to teach people with other learning styles and 
appreciate their different strengths, it's made me think about what I can 
do to take advantage of these other types of learning. Interestingly, some 
foreign and awkward skills I am working at these days, like socializing at 
parties and lifting weights properly, are probably really working those 
underdeveloped learning styles. Kolb provides a semi-helpful table of 
advice for what to try to improve on each style:
For Diverging (Reflective observation and Concrete experience)
* Being sensitive to people's feelings
* Being sensitive to values
* Listening with an open mind
* Gathering information
* Imagining the implications of ambiguous situations
For Assimilating (Reflective observation and Abstract Conceptualization)
* Organizing information
* Testing theories and ideas
* Building conceptual models
* Designing experiments
* Analyzing quantitative data
For Converging (Active Experimentation-Abstract Conceptualization)
* Creating new ways of thinking and doing
* Experimenting with new ideas
* Choosing the best solution
* Setting goals
* Making decisions
For Accomodating (Concrete experience and Active Experimentation)
* Committing yourself to objectives
* Seeking new opportunities
* Influencing and leading others
* Becoming personally involved
* Dealing with people
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