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Debra Bell
Wit and Wisdom

| Learning
Styles: Part 2 - The Routine Learner
Last week we looked at the first of 4
common types of learners. This week I want to introduce you to the routine
learner and suggest ways to accommodate her preferences in your homeschool
program. (Please read Part 1 in the archives to catch up on the ground
we’ve covered thus far.)
Here are the characteristics of the routine learner: While the active
learner from last week can be every teacher’s challenge, this learner is
every teacher’s joy. Here we have the cooperative child who is motivated
by a desire to win the approval of adults. She is naturally responsible,
studious and nurturing. In a group of children she is the one earnestly
listening to the teacher or helping the active learner to find his place
on the page.
She prefers a quiet, well-organized and structured environment. I call her
the routine learner because she desires order, consistency and clearly
delineated responsibilities. Her primary motivation is to understand and
meet others’ expectations. She will ask for clarification frequently in
an effort to avoid mistakes. Hearing lots of questions from the routine
learner is a good indicator that she is stressed and insecure about the
learning environment.
This learner assimilates information by identifying and memorizing facts
and procedures. She needs material presented in a sequential, step-by-step
manner. She is most comfortable with traditional teaching methods: written
assignments, repetition, drill, textbooks, and workbook learning. While
she works hard to master sub skills, her weakness is in seeing the big
picture – understanding the principles, concepts and abstractions. This
is the child who can decode every word on the page, but is not able to
answer questions concerning the story’s plot or characters’
motivations. She will correctly punctuate all the sentences in her
language arts book, but then not recognize when a semi-colon is needed in
her own writing.
The routine learner does not do well if she is expected to handle
open-ended assignments or to choose her own activities. She does not like
role-playing, estimating, predicting or other exercises that require
spontaneity, creativity or extrapolation.
Program Suggestions
This learner needs well-organized, sequential lessons presented in
incremental steps. Look for resources with clear directions and standards
of evaluations. Make sure your expectations are clearly articulated as you
launch into a subject of study.
Material developed for the classroom can easily be adapted for this kind
of learner. However, look at a sample lesson. How many concepts are
presented per lesson? Does the math workbook jump around between concepts
or move from simple illustrations to complex problems too quickly. This
learner is the one who will have the most difficulty switching gears. She
likes to travel the well-worn rut in the road.
The routine learner will naturally divide big projects into smaller steps
and segment out subjects for study. This is an effective tool for
accomplishing goals, but make sure she doesn’t lose sight of the larger
picture. She may have memorized the dates of the major Civil War battles,
states of the Union and Confederacy, etc., but does she understand how
economics, politics, scientific inventions and religious movements
converged to create this cataclysmic moment of our history?
Don’t just settle for correct answers on a multiple choice test; essay
tests for the older routine learner are a much better method for assessing
her understanding of the larger concepts. For younger routine learners,
have them orally paraphrase their reading for you as another method for
assessing and reinforcing their understanding of material.
It is easy because of her compliant nature to just settle for routine and
traditional materials for this learner. But it is not in her best
interest, she needs to learn to invent and take risks. Reward her for
creativity and trying new ventures: food, sports, travel, an academic
competition, a creative story. Build open-ended assignments into your
program – ones that require her to make choices and develop her own
ideas. Teach her to handle these in a step-by-step fashion.
This learner has an innate desire to be helpful. Teaching other children
is an effective strategy. It will appeal to her nurturing nature and has
the added plus of reinforcing her own learning in the areas she is
presenting to the group.
Next time: The Focused Learner
In His Sovereign Grace,
Debra
Recommended Resources:
The Ultimate Guide to Homeschooling,
Debra Bell. An entire section on learning styles is included in my book.
The Christian
Home Educators’ Curriculum Manual, Elementary, Cathy Duffy.
The Christian
Home Educators’ Curriculum Manual, Junior/Senior High, Cathy Duffy
Shepherding a
Child’s Heart, by Tedd Tripp
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