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Educational Psychology
An International Journal of Experimental Educational Psychology
Volume 18, 1998 - Issue 2
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Original Articles

An Investigation of the Effect of Individual Cognitive Preferences on Learning through Computer‐based Instruction

Pages 171-182 | Published online: 29 Sep 2006
 

Abstract

This paper reports a study investigating the effect of individual cognitive styles on learning through computer‐based instruction. The study adopted a quasi‐experimental design involving four groups which were presented with instructional material that either matched or mismatched with their preferred cognitive styles. Cognitive styles were measured by cognitive style assessment software (Riding, 1991). The instructional material was designed to cater for the four cognitive styles identified by Riding. Students’ learning outcomes were measured by the time taken to perform test tasks and the number of marks scored. The results indicate no significant difference between the matched and mismatched groups on both time taken and scores on test tasks. However, there was significant difference between the four cognitive styles on test score. The Wholist/Verbaliser group performed better then all other groups. There was no significant difference between the other groups. An analysis of the performance on test task by each cognitive style showed significant difference between the groups on recall, labelling and explanation. Difference between the cognitive style groups did not reach significance level for problem‐solving tasks. The findings of the study indicate a potential for cognitive style to influence learning outcomes measured by performance on test tasks.

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