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Learning Styles articles

Below are the best articles we could find on Learning Styles.

Our brains are miraculous complex organs that process information in many different ways, and there have been many attempts to categorize all of our various “learning styles.” Some sort them by how we like to receive information (such as visually or kinesthetically), some sort them by how we like to process the information (such as by reflecting or acting), and some sort them by our preferred psychological states (such as competitive or collaborative). What is important is not an official categorization, but rather figuring out what circumstances work best for us.

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John Wooden: Understanding Race Equality and Character Through Sports

John Wooden never talked much about race. He was just a decent man who understood what was right; he did right by people regardless of race, ethnicity, and religion; and he lived that creed.

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What Is Locke’s Goal Setting Theory of Motivation?

Do you often find yourself struggling to change your habits, regardless of how willing you are to set objectives? If your goals rarely reach fruition, you are not alone.

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What It’s Like to Be a Middle-Aged College Student

Forty years after I left school, I’m going back.

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How Gender Differences Make Decision-Making Difficult

Why does trouble come running as soon as two people, and especially folks of different genders, try to solve problems together? Male plus female plus a decision to be made invites a high potential for arguments.

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Hansel & Gretel and the Importance of Creative Strategies

When an ADHD brain leaves one task to go to another, and then back again, they may have a difficult time finding their footing in what they were doing in that original task, AND not have the motivation to begin it.

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Sitting the Bench the No. 1 Issue Between Parents, Coaches

In competitive youth sports programs, getting playing time is the number one issue for parents and players.

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Three Things that Help My Neurodiverse Family Run Smoothly

I am autistic. I am also the mother of an autistic child, and the wife of a neurotypical (nonautistic) partner. We are a neurodiverse family.

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How Can We Improve Outcomes for College Students with ADHD?

College students with ADHD face unique challenges—increased academic and social demands; diminished support; and elevated risk for anxiety, stress, and mood disorders—that often lead to adverse outcomes.

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What Does It Mean to Be an Autism-Supportive Online College?

To effectively communicate with autistic students, here’s what IT teams need to understand to be inclusive.

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The Esalen Institute and the Human Potential Movement Turn 50

In 1962, on a stunning stretch of land bordering the Pacific Ocean in Big Sur, California, two Stanford graduates named Michael Murphy and Dick Price founded a small retreat and workshop center called The Esalen Institute, otherwise known simply as Esalen.

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