What is your learning style? Do you know the learning style of your students? All teachers know that each student learns in a different way and comes into the classroom with their own unique learning style. As a teacher, you'll have the most success by knowing each students learning style and tempering your teaching method to suit your students.
This guide provides links to many articles on this topic. You'll find information on creating a learning style chart to examples and descriptions about the three most common learning styles, auditory, visual and kinesthetic. You'll also find articles on multiple intelligences. If you want to help your students learn the very best way possible, then this guide is for you.

| A Guide to the Learning Styles
Make learning a breeze for your students by discovering each child's individual learning style and incorporating activities and lessons that will tap into each style of learning... |
Teacher Tips: Super Strategies to Meet the Needs of Every Single Student
In the classroom, no two students are alike. Children think and react to their environment in different ways. How can teachers adapt to meet the diverse needs of students with different... |
| Different Learning Styles of Online & Distance Learning
With education becoming more and more interactive, some teachers may wonder how to teach those students who learn by different learning styles. In this article, learning styles in distance... |
What the Research Says About Gender Differences in Learning
Gender differences in learning styles is an important topic in education, and one that draws heated debate. Many teachers and researchers make a powerful case that educators should... |
| College Student Learning Styles and Studying Tips for Success
We all learn in some way. Whether it is kinesthetic, visual, or auditory, every college student has a specific learning style. College stress for a student is hard to manage, however... |
David Kolb's Learning Styles
David Kolb's model of learning styles is one of the most commonly used models of learning. Based on the Theory of Experiential Learning, two preference dimensions lead to four different... |