Styles of learning and learning of styles: Educational conflicts for American Indian/Alaskan Native youth
- 1 January 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development
- Vol. 8 (4) , 345-360
- https://doi.org/10.1080/01434632.1987.9994296
Abstract
This article presents a review of the literature about American Indian/Alaskan Native learning styles and related teaching styles. The topic of learning styles has recently emerged as a consideration for understanding the problems American Indian/Alaskan Native students are experiencing as they enter and leave formal educational programmes. The premise upon which the learning styles explanation is based suggests that culture plays an important part in determining how students have learned to learn at home. When that style is not congruent with the school learning style, the student is expected to change her/his style to fit that of the school.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Doing research on effective cross‐cultural teaching: The teacher talePeabody Journal of Education, 1983
- Measuring success and failure in the classroom: Teacher communication about tests and the understandings of young Navajo studentsPeabody Journal of Education, 1983
- Cherokee Culture And School AchievementAmerican Indian Culture and Research Journal, 1980
- Field Dependence-Independence in Navajo ChildrenInternational Journal of Psychology, 1978
- Intellectual Strengths in Culturally Different Groups: An Eskimo IllustrationReview of Educational Research, 1973
- Cooperation and Competition among Blackfoot Indian and Urban Canadian ChildrenChild Development, 1972
- Conceptual Styles, Culture Conflict, and Nonverbal Tests of IntelligenceAmerican Anthropologist, 1969
- Cherokee School Society and the Intercultural ClassroomHuman Organization, 1969
- Reflection-impulsivity: The generality and dynamics of conceptual tempo.Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 1966
- Factors Influencing the Academic Performance of Kwakiutl Children in CanadaComparative Education Review, 1965