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Study Advice for Read & Write Learners

December 20, 2010 by thestudygurus 17 Comments

Math is a particularly Read/Write subject

Read & Write Learners make good traditional studiers. They fit in with the conventional, school-taught study method of reading textbooks and writing notes.

Read & Write Learners are good at taking notes during class. They study best by reading over these notes or copying them out.

 

Is your child a Read & Write Learner?

Here are a few characteristics of Read & Write Learners. See if your child fits into this category.

Read & Write learners:

  1. enjoy reading (funnily enough!).
  2. would rather read by themselves or to others than be read to.
  3. often take exhaustive or verbatim notes in class.
  4. work best in quiet areas.
  5. prefer to study by themselves to avoid distraction.
  6. like articulate teachers who put a lot of information into sentences and notes.
  7. won’t hesitate to find a definition in a dictionary.

 

Study Tips for Read & Write Learners

Read & Write Learners should use more traditional study techniques that have them reading textbooks, note-taking, and rewriting their notes.

Take notes. Lots of notes.

This is especially important for Read & Write Learners! The act of writing out notes will help cement the ideas and facts into a student’s head.

Not only does note taking put the information from a lesson into words, it involves the student actually writing them down themselves.

The greatest tip for writing study notes is writing them in your own words!I can’t stress how incredibly important that part is.

Rewrite these notes

“Rewriting your notes” is an action we swear by. Yet many students underestimate the importance of rewriting their notes – they’ve already taken them!

It doesn’t matter! Especially for Read & Write Learners, rewriting notes is the most efficient way to get those important facts drilled into their brain.

Mind you, notes shouldn’t be re-written word for word. The process of reading, interpreting, putting into their own words, and then writing these down again, is the best type of study that a Read & Write Learner can do.

Take down LOTS of notes during class

Read & Write Learners need as many written notes as possible. Unfortunately, textbooks often don’t capture the same information that a student was taught in class.

Read & Write Learners should put in the time during class to write down all the notes they possibly can. This is so, when it comes to studying for exams, they can use their own notes as a starting place. From here they can fill in the gaps, and review the harder concepts with textbooks.

Don’t lose handouts

Read & Write Learners study very well from handouts – especially if they’re tailored well to the lesson. Students should keep a track of all the printout material that their teachers give them throughout the year and incorporate these into their study.

Use bullet point lists

Read & Write Learners learn well when they condense information into small, easily ingestible bits. Bullet point lists are the easiest way to put down a lot of information in one easy-to-read format.

The good news is pretty much every subject lends itself to bullet points.

Turn diagrams and charts into words

Some Read & Write Learners don’t learn particularly well through diagrams and charts. They either don’t know how to interpret them, they wouldn’t know how to re-create them, or they simply don’t process information in that way.

A Read & Write Learner should add as many subheadings and notes to every important diagram or chart.

This helps Read & Write Learners in several ways. First, it puts the information into words (which they, themselves have written down). Secondly, they will be more likely to remember their own definitions and explanations of what the diagram contained then what the textbook had written. And finally, during an exam they will be able to explain a chart or recall the important parts of a diagram that they would otherwise struggle to remember.

If you or your child is a Read & Write Learner, and you have a suggestion for us to add to the list we’d love to hear it! Tell us here.

 

A cautionary note

Unfortunately, most people don’t fit perfectly into one of the four learning style categories.

So, what does this mean? It means that your child should explore different ways of learning and choose to use the ones that they find most useful.

For more study tips, check out the other learning styles: Auditory Learning, Kinaesthetic Learning, Visual Learning.

Filed Under: Learning Styles Tagged With: learning styles, read & write learning, study, study tips, studying

Comments

  1. Daniel Pay says

    December 5, 2013 at 2:16 pm

    Hello,

    I have found your website very insightful regarding learning styles. I would like to quote Clare in my university paper, could I possibly have Clare’s surname to accurately reference this?

    Many thanks,

    Daniel

    Reply
    • Clare says

      December 6, 2013 at 11:41 pm

      Hey Daniel! I’ve sent you an email 🙂

      Reply
      • Naz says

        May 25, 2014 at 7:08 am

        Hello,

        I found it very informative too, could I please have your surname to reference this properly. Many thanks

        Reply
    • KATE says

      October 12, 2015 at 10:20 am

      I AM A READ AND WRITE LEARNER #YOLO

      Reply
  2. David Poa says

    March 30, 2014 at 5:46 am

    I am a Read/write learner

    Reply
  3. Monsa says

    May 9, 2014 at 11:52 pm

    May I also have Clares surname to use the site as a reference. May you please write it in the comment in order for the next person to be access it.

    Reply
  4. Clare says

    May 27, 2014 at 10:14 pm

    Hi guys, my surname is McIlwraith (that’s a capital ‘i’ then an ‘l’ for lemon). But please remember that while pretty much all of the study tips here and on our site generally come from us, the VARK learning styles construct is not our idea, so you might want to look into that a bit more too 🙂

    Reply
  5. Yani says

    September 20, 2014 at 12:17 pm

    Really enjoyed this topic . I always wondered why I had to write out my notes to really understand and remember them in contrast to others who just read and remembered. Thought they were more clever than me. Now I understand .

    Reply
  6. Jonah says

    October 5, 2014 at 9:11 am

    One question, do these group of people study well with music? or do they need a very quiet environment..

    Reply
  7. Jonah says

    October 5, 2014 at 9:12 am

    I know they said quiet environment but means even no music?

    Reply
    • Clare says

      October 5, 2014 at 10:03 pm

      Good question Jonah – generally speaking ‘purist’ reader/writer learners will study most productively in a quiet environment.. But that doesn’t mean that some reader/writer learners won’t study well with music.These tips provide a great starting point, but the great thing is that you can adapt them to suit YOU! So if you find listening to music helpful when you study, then go for it!

      Reply
  8. Pam says

    January 15, 2015 at 1:18 pm

    This is my daughter’s learning profile. What would be the best way for her to learn multiples in math?

    Reply
    • Clare says

      February 8, 2015 at 5:59 pm

      The first thing is for your daughter to understand what multiples are. This might sound silly and obvious, but a lot of students embark blindly on tasks without understanding what it is that they’re doing. The next and main thing to do, is simply to practice. Your daughter could go about this in a number of different ways: she could write the sequences down, say them out loud, complete exercises either in her math books or online – or both! She could do a mixture of all these things. Ultimately she has to found out which methods work best for her.

      Reply

Trackbacks

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  3. Learning How to Learn | Tracy Tran says:
    September 8, 2015 at 12:53 am

    […] I am a read/write and kinesthetic learner. The other options are aural and visual learner, btw. Read/write is apparently good for traditional schooling, with note-taking and lots of reading and handouts. […]

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    December 15, 2015 at 8:17 am

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