Why Multisensory Learning is important

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Please watch this brief educational slideshow to learn why Multisensory Learning is important. Couple this information with a great exhibit (www.bodyadventure.org) designed to teach kids about healthy eating and obesity and you can create a teaching/learning environment that works.

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Why Multisensory

Learning is important!

By Allen Clouse

Teaching our children is oneof the most important things

we can do.

The real question is, how do weget kids to remember what they

are taught?

First, we must engage them!

Second, we must communicate the main idea of our message effectively

and put the idea into context.

Third, we must stimulate the senses of the learner to reinforce the message.

Fourth, we must repeat the message.

In summary, if we can incorporate visual, auditory, and tactile stimuli into

a learning environment, we can imprint a memory. In turn, learning can be more effectively achieved.

The more senses stimulated, the more we remember.

What this means for

educators and caregivers.

No more boring

classrooms-we must

engage the learner!

Movement and exercise is important.

Repeat to remember…remember to

repeat.

Stimulate as many senses as possible to make learning occur.

Multisensory learning works and can imprint memories that last a lifetime.

References

Related Reading:

Clark, Diana Brewster and Uhry, Joanna

Kellogg, 1995. Dyslexia: Theory & Practice

of Remedial Instruction, Second Edition.

Baltimore, MD: York Press.

de Hirsch, Katrina, 1984. Language and the

Developing Child. Goldsworthy, Candace L., 1996,

Developmental Reading Disabilities: A

Language-Based Treatment Approach. San

Diego, CA: Singular Publishing Group, Inc.

Gough, Philip B. Ph.D., 1996. How

Children Learn to Read and Why They Fail,

Annals of Dyslexia, reprint #141. Baltimore,

MD: The International Dyslexia

Association. Putnam, L. R., 1996. How to Become a

Better Reading Teacher. Englewood Cliffs,

NJ: Merrill. Schupack, Helaine and Wilson, Barbara,

1997. The “R” Book, Reading, Writing &

Spelling: The Multisensory Structured

Language Approach. Baltimore, MD: The

International Dyslexia Association’s Orton

Emeritus Series.

Torgesen, Joseph, Ph.D., 1997. The “P”

Book, Phonological Awareness: A Critical

Factor in Dyslexia. Baltimore, MD: The

International Dyslexia Association’s Orton

Emeritus Series. Vail, Priscilla, 1996. Words Fail Me: How

Language Works and What Happens When

It Doesn’t. Rosemont, NJ: Modern Learning

Press.

© Copyright 2000, The International Dyslexia Association

(IDA). IDA encourages the reproduction and distribution

of this fact sheet.

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