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FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
Aren't learning styles between people more
important than generational changes?
A number of people have said to me (some quite angrily) that differences
between people that we have recently referred to as "learning styles"
or different "intelligences" are more important than differences
between the "Digital Immigrant" and the "Digital Native " generations.
I strongly disagree. No thinking person that I have talked to maintains
seriously that his or her children are not enormously different
from them in the ways they think and learn. .
For some reason - maybe because they are "adults" or work in the
same firm, or do the same jobs -- many older people have a hard
time realizing or admitting that their younger colleagues are more
like their children then like themselves. But they are. While the
chasm grows wider every year and is more recognizable and obvious
in the 3-year-old who uses the mouse to access kids' games on his
or her own on the internet, the differences have been in place and
building ever since computers. computer games, and other new technologies
came on the scene. It is these differences, more than anything else,
that lie at the root of our obvious teaching and training problems
today, because teachers and trainers are essentially from a different
world, and speak a different language from their Digital Native
students - with a non-digital, immigrant "accent" that
their students to a great extent find unbearably old fashioned and
boring.
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