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Views #1217 | Advanced (C1)

Learn Types Part 1

Julia talks about various types of learners and shares what type of learner she it.

Todd: So, Julia, we're both teachers.

Julia: That's right.

Todd: And are you familier with the different learner types?

Julia: A little bit, yes, I encounter different kinds of learners in my classrooms.

Todd: OK, so for example, what kind of learner are you?

Julia: I think possibly more than one, maybe overlap on a couple, but primarily a visual learner so I'd have to take it in through my eyes usually like with a picture. I certainly have to see a word if I'm learning a language. I have to see it written down.

Todd: So you need a phonetic script? You need something?

Julia: I need something visual.

Todd: Yeah for it to stick in your head?

Julia: For it to stay in my mind, it has to have a visual. I can't just hear it for example. I can't just hear a word and remember it. I have to have some sort of visual to connect it to.

Todd: OK, so you're a visual learner, anything else?

Julia: I think it's called a visual learner. I don't know the technical term for it but an emotional learner if a...

Todd: Really?

Julia: Yeah. If a piece of information or the thing that I'm learning is attached to an emotional experience, I store it very definitively. I can remember it. I can recall it. If it's just a neutral, say a sentence, I can't remember it. It has to have a back story. It has to have an emotional connection somehow.

Todd: Right. It has to have some connection?

Julia: Yes, yeah. Usually a personal story especially humor. If there's a joke involved, if it made me laugh at the time of learning it. I'm a laughter learner, I don't know if that's a real one but definitely an emotional response makes it much more easy for me to learn something.

Learn Vocabulary from the Lesson

encounter

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I encounter different kinds of learners in my classrooms.

When you 'encounter' something or someone, you come into contact with it. Notice the following:

  1. You never know what kind of people you are going to encounter on trips abroad.
  2. Do you get nervous about encountering wild animals in the jungle?

primarily

image

I'm primarily a visual learner.

'Primarily' can be replaced by 'mainly' or 'essentially.' Julia is saying that she usually learns best with visual cues. Notice the following:

  1. He wears primarily black clothes.
  2. Do you speak primarily English at home?

visual learner

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I'm primarily a visual learner.

A 'visual learner' is a person who learns best by seeing something, rather that just hearing it. Notice the following:

  1. Can you write that word down for me? I'm more of a visual learner.
  2. Most of the class is taught for visual learners, so that's why it's hard for me.

phonetic script

image

So you need a phonetic script?

When something is written in 'phonetic script,' it is written with special symbols that show how it spoken. Notice the following:

  1. The school encourages teachers to use phonetic script in the classroom.
  2. Do you understand how to read phonetic script?

recall

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If something that I'm learning is attached to an emotional experience, I store it very definitely.

When you 'recall' something, you remember it.Notice the following:

  1. With some memory problems, people have difficult recalling events that happened a few minutes ago.
  2. I can't recall her husband's name right now.

Vocabulary Quiz

encounter • primarily • visual
phonetic • recall
  1. Can you write that down for me? I'm more of a learner.
  2. This class focuses on speaking.
  3. I know what street she lives on, but I don't the house number.
  4. It's hard to know exactly what you will on camping trips.
  5. Most of the students here like it when you use symbols when you teach new vocabulary.
Answer the following questions about the interview.

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