Y11W04VC The learning-styles myth
If you went through school in the last forty years, you probably encountered this idea. Maybe a teacher asked you to take a survey about whether you were a visual, auditory, or kinaesthetic learner. Over 90 per cent of teachers still believe in learning styles. Almost no serious cognitive scientist does. This week's article examines one of the most successful — and empirically wrong — ideas in modern education.
Core Vocabulary
purporting
/pərˈpɔːtɪŋ/|pur·port·ing
verb (present participle)
Claiming or appearing to be something; presenting oneself as having a particular quality or authority.
Word Breakdown: From Old French "purporter" (to carry forward, maintain), from pur- (forth) + porter (to carry).
Word family: purport (v/n), purporting (v), purports (v), purportedly (adv)
Synonyms: claiming, pretending, alleging, professing, appearing
Collocations: purporting to be, purporting to show, purporting to demonstrate, research purporting
Example: Many education companies market products purporting to match teaching to individual learning styles, despite weak scientific evidence.
rigorous
/ˈrɪɡərəs/|rig·or·ous
adjective
Extremely thorough, careful, and precise; conducted with strict attention to detail and scientific standards.
Word Breakdown: From Latin "rigorous" (stiff, hard), from "rigere" (to be stiff).
Word family: rigorous (adj), rigorously (adv), rigor (n), rigorousness (n), unrigorous (adj)
Synonyms: thorough, meticulous, careful, precise, exacting
Collocations: rigorous research, rigorous testing, rigorous methodology, rigorous analysis, rigorous evidence
Example: Rigorous experimental designs that control for placebo effects show no advantage to matching teaching style to learning preference.
commissioned
/kəˈmɪʃənd/|com·mis·sioned
adjective/verb (past)
Officially ordered or requested; hired to produce something; authorized to take action.
Word Breakdown: From Latin "committere" (to entrust), combined with "missus" (sent). Com- (together) + mittere (to send).
Word family: commission (n/v), commissioned (adj), commissioning (n), commissioner (n)
Synonyms: ordered, hired, contracted, authorized, tasked
Collocations: commissioned study, commissioned research, commissioned by, newly commissioned, specially commissioned
Example: The British Psychological Society commissioned an independent review of learning-styles evidence.
persist
/pərˈsɪst/|per·sist
verb
To continue firmly or obstinately despite difficulty or opposition; to remain or endure.
Word Breakdown: From Latin "persistere" (to persevere), from per- (through) + sistere (to stand, cause to stand).
Word family: persist (v), persistent (adj), persistently (adv), persistence (n)
Synonyms: continue, persevere, endure, last, remain
Collocations: persist despite, persist in, persist with, persist through, persist even
Example: The learning-styles myth continues to persist in educational practice despite evidence showing no measurable benefit.
perpetuates
/pərˈpɛtʃueɪts/|per·pet·u·ates
verb (third person singular)
Makes something continue indefinitely; causes to persist or repeat over generations.
Word Breakdown: From Latin "perpetuare" (to make permanent), from "perpetuus" (continuous, eternal). Per- (thoroughly) + petere (to seek).
Word family: perpetuate (v), perpetuates (v), perpetuated (v), perpetual (adj), perpetually (adv)
Synonyms: maintains, sustains, continues, prolongs, extends
Collocations: perpetuates myth, perpetuates belief, perpetuates stereotype, perpetuates cycle
Example: Marketing to learning preferences perpetuates the myth because it creates the illusion of personalisation.
putative
/ˈpjuːtətɪv/|pu·ta·tive
adjective
Generally considered or reputed to be something, though not necessarily proven; assumed or supposed.
Word Breakdown: From Latin "putativus" (supposed, reputed), from "putare" (to think, reckon, consider).
Word family: putative (adj), putatively (adv)
Synonyms: alleged, supposed, presumed, reputed, assumed
Collocations: putative benefits, putative link, putative reason, putative evidence
Example: The putative benefits of matching instruction to learning styles remain unproven after decades of research.
empirical
/ɪmˈpɪrɪkəl/|em·pir·i·cal
adjective
Based on observation, experience, or experiment rather than theory alone; supported by evidence.
Word Breakdown: From Greek "empirikos" (experienced), from "empeiria" (experience). Em- (in) + peira (attempt, trial).
Word family: empirical (adj), empirically (adv), empiricism (n), empiricist (n)
Synonyms: evidence-based, experimental, observed, practical, experiential
Collocations: empirical evidence, empirical research, empirical study, empirical findings, empirical support
Example: Empirical evidence consistently shows no advantage to instruction matched to learning-style preferences.
divergence
/daɪˈvɜːdʒəns/|di·ver·gence
noun
The process or point at which something divides into separate branches; a difference or departure from a standard.
Word Breakdown: From Latin "divergere" (to go in different directions). Di- (apart) + vergere (to turn, incline).
Word family: diverge (v), divergence (n), divergent (adj), divergently (adv), convergence (n)
Synonyms: separation, branching, deviation, difference, departure
Collocations: divergence between, divergence from, evolutionary divergence, viewpoint divergence
Example: There is a significant divergence between the popular belief in learning styles and what rigorous research actually shows.
Technical Terms
meshing hypothesis
/ˈmɛʃɪŋ haɪˈpɒθɪsɪs/|mesh·ing hy·poth·e·sis
noun phrase
the claim that instruction should be matched to a student's preferred learning style
Synonyms: learning-styles matching hypothesis, modality-matching theory, VAK hypothesis
Collocations: test the meshing hypothesis, meshing hypothesis research, meshing hypothesis predicts
Example: The meshing hypothesis predicts that visual learners should perform better with diagrams than with text — but controlled experiments consistently fail to find this advantage.
retrieval practice
/rɪˈtriːv(ə)l ˈpræktɪs/|re·triev·al prac·tice
noun phrase
study by attempting to recall information, rather than re-reading
Synonyms: practice testing, active recall, test-enhanced learning
Collocations: engage in retrieval practice, retrieval practice effect, retrieval practice strengthens memory
Example: Students who used retrieval practice — closing their notes and writing down everything they could recall — consistently outperformed re-readers on delayed tests.
spaced repetition
/speɪst ˌrɛpɪˈtɪʃ(ə)n/|spaced rep·e·ti·tion
noun phrase
learning technique that distributes reviews across time
Synonyms: distributed practice, spacing effect, spaced learning
Collocations: use spaced repetition, spaced repetition system, benefit of spaced repetition
Example: Rather than cramming the night before, she reviewed material at increasing intervals over several weeks — using spaced repetition to move information from short-term familiarity to durable retention.
interleaved practice
/ˌɪntəˈliːvd ˈpræktɪs/|in·ter·leaved prac·tice
noun phrase
mixing different kinds of problems or topics within a study session
Synonyms: mixed practice, varied practice, interleaving
Collocations: interleaved practice schedule, benefit of interleaved practice, interleaved with other topics
Example: Instead of completing all geometry problems before moving to algebra, she interleaved practice across both topics — making each session harder but producing noticeably better long-term retention.
cognitive load
/ˈkɒɡnɪtɪv ləʊd/|cog·ni·tive load
noun phrase
the total mental effort demanded by a task
Synonyms: mental load, processing demand, cognitive demand
Collocations: reduce cognitive load, cognitive load theory, high cognitive load
Example: A poorly designed form increases cognitive load by requiring users to remember too many steps — a burden that leaves less mental capacity for the actual decision being made.
Figurative Phrases
along these lines
in this general direction
Etymology/Type: non-literal, no actual lines
Synonyms: in this direction, in this vein, on this general approach
Example: She wanted her students thinking along these lines — not mimicking the exact argument, but understanding the general structure that made it convincing.
quietly draining
gradually exhausting without notice
Etymology/Type: figurative, not literal drainage
Synonyms: subtly exhausting, insidiously depleting, gradually sapping energy
Example: The constant effort to plan lessons around each student's supposed learning style was quietly draining — requiring significant time for no measurable benefit.
comes along
arrives, as with better research
Etymology/Type: idiomatic; 'along' doesn't add literal meaning
Synonyms: appears, emerges, arrives on the scene
Example: When a more effective teaching method comes along, it rarely displaces the old approach immediately — habit, training, and institutional inertia all provide resistance.
baked into
firmly embedded
Etymology/Type: metaphor from cooking, meaning made integral to
Synonyms: built into, embedded in, inherent in
Example: The assumption that students needed instruction matched to their individual style was so thoroughly baked into teacher training that few practitioners ever questioned it.
cautionary tale
a story that warns
Etymology/Type: idiomatic compound; meaning beyond literal warning story
Synonyms: warning story, instructive failure, object lesson
Example: The rapid adoption of learning-styles theory in schools worldwide, without adequate evidence, serves as a cautionary tale about the gap between popular belief and research findings.
accidentally stumble toward
approach something by chance
Etymology/Type: figurative 'stumble', not physical
Confusing Words
purporting vs proposing
These near-synonyms both describe claims being put forward, but they carry very different implicit judgements about the credibility of those claims.
- purporting — claiming or appearing to be something, often with an implied doubt about whether the claim is genuine or justified. A theory purporting to explain all learning differences signals scepticism: the word flags that the claim has not been validated. It is the language of critical distance.
- proposing — putting something forward openly for consideration and evaluation, without any built-in scepticism. A scientist proposing a hypothesis is offering it sincerely for testing. The word carries no suggestion that the claim is likely to be false.
If you want to signal doubt or scepticism about a claim, use purporting. If presenting a genuine idea openly for consideration, use proposing.
empirical vs theoretical
These words describe two fundamentally different sources of knowledge — observation of the world, and reasoning from principles.
- empirical — based on evidence from observation, experiment, or measurement. An empirical finding is something demonstrated in data: you can point to the study, the participants, and the results. Empirical knowledge is grounded in what has actually been tested and observed.
- theoretical — derived from abstract reasoning, principles, or models rather than direct observation. A theoretical claim makes sense given a framework; it may or may not have been tested empirically. In science, a theoretical prediction often precedes and motivates empirical investigation.
If the claim comes from observed data and experiment, use empirical. If the claim comes from reasoning and modelling, use theoretical.
perpetuates vs perpetrates
These paronyms look and sound similar but describe entirely different kinds of action — one about continuation, the other about commission.
- perpetuates — keeps something going; causes it to continue or be maintained over time. A myth is perpetuated when it keeps being repeated and believed. There is no implication that the person perpetuating something intended harm — only that they are sustaining it.
- perpetrates — commits an act, usually a harmful or illegal one. A fraud is perpetrated; a crime is perpetrated. The word implies intentionality and wrongdoing. It belongs to the language of responsibility, fault, and deliberate action.
If describing something being kept going or sustained over time, use perpetuates. If describing the deliberate commission of a wrongful act, use perpetrates.
- Choosing a selection results in a full page refresh.
- Opens in a new window.