What are the four styles in the VARK hypothesis?
- auditory, kinaesthetic, visual and reading-writing
- auditory, activist, visual and reading-writing
- auditory, kinaesthetic, visual and theoretical
- auditory, kinaesthetic, impulsive and reading-writing
Someone who learns well by listening is described as ...
- an auditory learner
- a reflector learner
- a good listener
- a kinaesthetic learner
Pragmatists ...
- are flexible and enjoy problem solving
- like to stand back and think things through
- like theories to explain things
- are usually dominantly reading-writing learners
Reflectors ...
- are down-to-earth problem solvers
- try to integrate things into theories
- are willing to jump in and try new things
- like to stand back and think
Japanese culture exhibits ...
- high uncertainty avoidance
- low power distance
- low uncertainty avoidance
Scandinavian, British, USA and German cultures typically exhibit ...
- low to medium power distance
- high to very high power distance
- very high levels of uncertainty avoidance
- high power distance and high uncertainty avoidance
Someone with strong interpersonal intelligence may prefer ...
- to work on their own goals
- to cooperate with other learners
- to set themselves challenges
- to do lots of pronunciation practice
Intonation and rhythm exercises will be easier for people with high ...
- linguistic intelligence
- musical intelligence
- logical-mathematical intelligence
- bodily-kinaesthetic intelligence
An exercise which involves moving and matching cut-out headlines with cut-out paragraphs will appeal to people who are strongly ...
- kinaesthetic and reading-writing learners
- theorists and pragmatists
- visual and auditory learners
- reflectors and people with high spatial-visual intelligence
Learners from cultures which have high power distances will expect the teacher to ...
- manage the classroom assertively
- work on an equal basis with the students
- use lots of pair and group work
- be open to their views and opinions