TY - JOUR
T1 - Who prefers what? Disciplinary differences in students' preferred approaches to teaching and learning styles
AU - Hativa, Nira
AU - Birenbaum, Menucha
N1 - Funding Information:
1. The research reported in this article was assisted by a grant from The Spencer Foundation. The data presented, the statements made, and the views expressed are the sole responsibility of the authors.
PY - 2000/4
Y1 - 2000/4
N2 - This study develops a tool for identifying students' preferred teaching approaches, with high internal consistency for the scales involved. We examined these preferences in relation to students' approaches to learning and to two academic disciplines with contrasting academic environments. The sample consisted of 175 engineering and education undergraduates at a major university in Israel. Responses to our questionnaire revealed students' preferences for four approaches that correspond to the four main instructional approaches that had been identified in research based on teachers' sources. Students' most favored teaching approach is the lecturer who is organized, clear, and interesting, and the second, with a large gap from the first, is the instructor who provides for students' needs in learning. The two approaches least favored are information-transmission and promotion of self-regulation. Students with different approaches to learning preferred teaching approaches that best served their learning approaches. There were few discipline-related differences in students' preferences, in spite of the very different learning environments. However, all participants preferred teaching approaches that they perceived as beneficial for learning but that they had not often experienced, if at all.
AB - This study develops a tool for identifying students' preferred teaching approaches, with high internal consistency for the scales involved. We examined these preferences in relation to students' approaches to learning and to two academic disciplines with contrasting academic environments. The sample consisted of 175 engineering and education undergraduates at a major university in Israel. Responses to our questionnaire revealed students' preferences for four approaches that correspond to the four main instructional approaches that had been identified in research based on teachers' sources. Students' most favored teaching approach is the lecturer who is organized, clear, and interesting, and the second, with a large gap from the first, is the instructor who provides for students' needs in learning. The two approaches least favored are information-transmission and promotion of self-regulation. Students with different approaches to learning preferred teaching approaches that best served their learning approaches. There were few discipline-related differences in students' preferences, in spite of the very different learning environments. However, all participants preferred teaching approaches that they perceived as beneficial for learning but that they had not often experienced, if at all.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0039173030&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1023/A:1007095205308
DO - 10.1023/A:1007095205308
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AN - SCOPUS:0039173030
SN - 0361-0365
VL - 41
SP - 209
EP - 236
JO - Research in Higher Education
JF - Research in Higher Education
IS - 2
ER -