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International Journal of Education Research Volume 7, Number 1, Spring 2012 1

HOW COLLEGE INSTRUCTORS CAN ENHANCE STUDENT


ACHIEVEMENT: TESTING A LEARNING STYLES THEORY

Ralph A. Terregrossa
St. Johns University

Fred Englander
Zhaobo Wang
Theodore Wielkopolski
Fairleigh Dickinson University

ABSTRACT

This paper examines the influence of learning styles on the achievement of college
students in introductory economics and accounting courses and whether students learning styles
differ in a meaningful way between the two disciplines. The Building Excellence (BE) learning
styles survey (Rundle & Dunn, 2009a), designed to reflect the revised Dunn and Dunn (Rundle &
Dunn, 2009b) learning styles model, is used to identify students preferences for twenty-six
learning style variables which fall into six learning style categories. The results show that
learning styles have a significant impact on student achievement, ceteris paribus, and that the
economics students in the sample have a much different learning styles profile than the accounting
students. Examples are provided as to how instructors may respond to such differences.

Keywords: Academic performance, learning styles instrument, business disciplines

INTRODUCTION
Students academic achievement depends critically on the teaching effectiveness of the
instructor. In many cases, college instructors are evaluated for purposes of retention, tenure and
promotion based on their teaching effectiveness, as measured by the gains in academic
achievement accomplished by their students. Two important factors that determine the
effectiveness of an instructor are the instructors breadth and depth of knowledge of his or her
discipline and the instructors ability to convey that knowledge. The Dunn and Dunn learning
styles model (DDLSM) (Dunn, 2000), contends that the ability of an instructor to effectively
convey knowledge to students depends on the extent to which the instructors teaching method
matches the pattern of learning style preferences of his/her students. The cornerstone of the
DDLSM is the hypothesis that the optimal method of instruction in any discipline is that method
that matches students learning styles.
Students learning style preferences are identified from their responses to the Building
Excellence (BE) learning styles survey (Rundle & Dunn, 2009a). The BE survey is designed to
reflect the revised version of the Dunn and Dunn (Rundle & Dunn, 2009b) learning styles model
which includes environmental, emotional, sociological, perceptual, physiological and
psychological learning style categories. The BE is an online survey containing 118 self-
reflective questions that are answered on a five-point Likert scale. The BE survey identifies all
twenty-six learning style elements contained in the six categories that comprise the DDLSM
(Rundle & Dunn, 2009b). For example, the preference for noise is determined by answering
strongly agree, agree, uncertain, disagree or strongly disagree to the following
statements:
2 International Journal of Education Research Volume 7, Number 1, Spring 2012
I concentrate best in quiet surroundings with no sound or people talking.
I concentrate best when there is sound, or when music is playing in the background.
I concentrate best in a quiet place--especially when I am working on difficult tasks.
I concentrate best with sound in the background, when I am working on difficult tasks.
A refined list of the learning style preferences identified by the BE survey are included as
independent variables in regression model to explain variations in students academic
achievement. Qualitative variables reflecting the influences of gender and any potential
differences in the rigor of the three semester exams on student achievement are included as
additional explanatory variables. The analysis presented here examines whether the learning
style variables have a statistically significant effect on student achievement. Additional analysis
allows a ranking of the relative importance of the contribution of the alternative learning style
variables and learning style categories to students academic achievement. Moreover, students
learning styles in the accounting and economics courses are compared to determine if differences
exist between the disciplines regarding the significance of the marginal contribution and relative
importance of the learning style variables and categories to student achievement. This
comparison provides insight regarding the merits of tailoring instructional methods to more
closely match students learning styles to enhance students academic achievement. Examples
are provided of potential teaching methods that may be used by instructors to match the most
influential learning style preferences of the economics and accounting students in order to
enhance both teaching effectiveness and student achievement.

LITERTATURE REVIEW

Coffield, Moseley, Hall and Ecclestone (2004) examined the validity, reliability and
practical application of major learning styles models, including the DDLSM (Dunn, 2000)
model. Although the authors find that the model is reliable in terms of its predictive ability, they
conclude that the findings of the numerous studies that support the DDLSM (Dunn, 2000) model
are suspect because of the studies methodological limitations and because of a lack of
independent research conducted on the DDLSM (Dunn, 2000) model.
Hawk and Shaw (2007) also examined the validity and reliability of major learning styles
models as well as the respective instruments used to identify learning styles, including the Dunn,
Dunn and Price (2006) Productivity Environmental Preference Survey (PEPS). The PEPS,
designed to reflect the earlier version of the DDLSM (Dunn, 2000) model, includes the
environmental, emotional, sociological, physiological and psychological categories, which are
composed of twenty interrelated learning style preferences. Hawk and Shaw (2007) report that
solid evidence exists that supports the reliability and validity of the PEPS instrument to identify
students learning styles. Consistent with Hawk and Shaw (2007), the study by Terregrossa,
Englander and Wang (2009a) provides evidence supporting the construct validity of the PEPS
instrument, the internal validity of the Dunn and Dunn (2000) model and the hypothesis that
students learning styles contributes significantly to student achievement.
The Building Excellence (BE) survey (Rundle and Dunn, 2009a), designed to reflect the
revised version of the Dunn and Dunn (Rundle & Dunn, 2009b) learning styles model, is wider
in scope than the PEPS instrument in terms of identifying students learning styles. Unlike the
PEPS instrument, the BE survey includes a separate learning styles category accounting for an
expanded list of perceptual modality preferences, including visual-text, visual-graphic, auditory
(learning by listening), verbal-kinesthetic (learning by verbalizing) and tactile/kinesthetic. The
International Journal of Education Research Volume 7, Number 1, Spring 2012 3
BE survey is a relatively new instrument and therefore has not been substantially scrutinized in
statistical models designed to explain variations in college student achievement.
The methodology developed in this analysis represents the first known utilization of
students learning styles measured by the BE instrument in a regression analysis framework to
examine the contribution of students learning styles to their academic achievement. In this way,
the methodology applied in this study represents an improvement over previous research that
investigated the relationship between college students academic achievement and their learning
styles.

Learning Styles

The revised Dunn and Dunn learning styles model (Rundle, & Dunn., 2009b) theorizes
that an individuals learning style is composed of a combination of interrelated perceptual,
environmental, physiological, emotional, sociological, and psychological categories. The
perceptual category includes preferences for alternative perceptual modalities, including
auditory, or learning by listening; visual-picture, or learning by seeing images, illustrations or
pictures; visual-word, or learning by reading; tactile and/or kinesthetic, or learning through
hands-on experience and by doing; and verbal-kinesthetic, or learning by verbalizing.
The environmental category includes preferences for background sound versus silence,
bright or soft light, cool or warm temperature and formal versus informal seating. The
physiological category reflects the students ability to remain energized, focused and alert. This
category includes preferences for intake of snacks or drinks while learning, the time of day when
the student does his or her best work, and whether the student needs to be moving while learning.
The emotional category includes preferences for internal versus external motivation,
persistence, or starting and finishing one project at a time, conformity to societal norms, and
structure, or a preference for internal or external direction. The sociological category reflects
whether students prefer to work alone, with a partner or with a group of peers, and whether
students prefer to learn with an authoritative versus collegial adult. This category also reflects
whether students prefer to learn using a variety of methods or by using an established routine.
The psychological category includes the preference for either a reflective or compulsive
approach to making decisions and solving problems. This category also identifies the students
thought processing method, hypothesized to include analytic, global and integrated processing
methods. The integrated learners have both analytic and global characteristics and utilize the
alternative styles depending on the nature of, and interest in, the material to be learned.
Analytic learners learn best in a quiet, brightly lighted and formal (e.g., sitting at a desk)
environment. They like to work alone, tend to be persistent (e.g., prefer to start and finish one
project at a time), and do not snack while learning. They also learn more easily when details are
presented in a sequential, step-by-step manner that builds toward a conceptual understanding of
the idea to be learned.
Global learners learn more easily when they understand the total concept first then
subsequently focus on the underlying details. They learn best with background sound, soft light
in a relaxed environment (e.g., sitting on a couch or in a coffee shop). They prefer to work with
others, tend not to be persistent (e.g., work simultaneously on several projects), take frequent
breaks, enjoy snacks when learning, and prefer to be taught with the use of illustrations and
symbols. Global learners prefer new information to be presented anecdotally, especially in a
humorous way that explains how the concept relates to them. The revised DDLSM (Rundle &
4 International Journal of Education Research Volume 7, Number 1, Spring 2012
Dunn, 2009b) hypothesizes that analytic, global and integrated learners can be identified by their
preferences for noise, light, design, persistence and intake.

OBJECTIVES AND HYPOTHESES

The main objective of this study is to determine if instructors could effectively utilize
information about their students learning styles to enhance students academic achievement. To
achieve this objective, undergraduate students enrolled in principles of macroeconomics and
accounting courses are analyzed to test the hypothesis that academic achievement is significantly
correlated with student learning styles, ceteris paribus. A second objective of this study is to
rank order the relative impact of the alternative learning style categories on student achievement.
The hypothesis tested is whether a particular learning styles category (collection of related,
individual learning style variables), when considered as a subset of the total number of
explanatory variables, and confronted by the remaining categories, has a significant effect on
student achievement. A third objective of this study is to determine the relative importance of
the alternative learning style variables that compose the learning style category that has the
greatest impact on student achievement. Standardized regression coefficients are used to
accomplish this objective. A fourth objective of this study is to determine whether learning
styles differ in a meaningful way between students in accounting courses and economics courses.
If the learning style variables that have a significant impact on student achievement in the two
disciplines differ, then alternative teaching strategies to reflect such differences are warranted.

METHODOLOGY

Test scores of students are regressed against a refined list of learning style variables,
gender and other control variables to determine if learning styles have a significant impact on
student achievement. Additional analysis is offered to determine the relative importance of the
alternative learning style variables and learning style categories, respectively.
Data for the twenty-six learning style preferences were collected from the BE survey that
was administered to over twenty-six hundred entering freshmen in the fall semester of 2004. The
sample analyzed in this study included a total of sixty-one students, twenty-seven in economics
and thirty-four in accounting. Students in both courses were taught in a college of business,
accredited by the AACSB, at a university located in the New York City. The macroeconomics
course was taught by an associate professor of economics, and the accounting course was taught
by an associate professor of accounting.
The same OLS regression model was applied to both disciplines. Students test scores, a
proxy for academic achievement, served as the dependent variable. Three tests were
administered in the macroeconomics course during the semester for a total of eighty-one
observations, and four tests were administered in the accounting course for a total of 136
observations. The explanatory variables included a refined list (explained below) of eighteen
learning style variables, a binary variable accounting for the influence of gender (females serving
as the base category), and binary variables accounting for the influence of possible differences in
the difficulty level of the alternative tests, with the last test serving as the base category. The
OLS regression model is summarized in the following equation:

(1)

ij
t
ti j i
b
bi b ij
e TDummy a GDummy a LSV a a EX + + + + =

= =
22
20
19
18
1
0
International Journal of Education Research Volume 7, Number 1, Spring 2012 5

where EX
ij
is the i
th
students score on the j
th
test, i goes from 1 to 34 and 1 to 27 for the
accounting and economics courses, respectively, and j goes from 1 to 4 and 1 to 3, for accounting
and economics courses, respectively; LSV
bi
is the b
th
learning style variable for i
th
student;
GDummy
i
is the gender binary variable with female serving as the base category; TDummy
ti
are
the binary variables representing the different characteristics of the tests, with the last test
serving as the base category in both disciplines (In the economics regression model only the first
and second test dummy variables are included since only three tests were administered during the
semester); and e
ij
is a stochastic error term.
With regard to the refinement of the learning style variables, there naturally exists a high
degree of correlation among many of the learning style variables. Consequently, the parameters
associated with the learning style variables do not have a separate and independent influence on
student achievement. It would therefore be difficult to separate the effect of one particular
learning style variable from the effect of the other correlated learning styles variable(s) on
student achievement. Hence, the ability of the learning style variables to adequately explain
differences in student achievement would be compromised. Pindyck and Rubinfeld (1998)
suggest that it may be reasonable in such cases to drop one of the collinear variables from the
model and re-estimate it. The results of the re-estimated model then can be compared with the
original model to gauge the effect of the multicollinearity in the original model (Pindyck &
Rubinfeld, 1998, p. 97).
The method suggested by Pindyck and Rubinfeld (1998) was utilized to identify which
learning style variables are highly collinear and candidates for exclusion from the student
achievement regression model. The regression models, including all twenty-six learning style
variables, were estimated and the variable inflation factor (VIF) scores were analyzed to
determine which learning style variables had a score equal to or above ten, the generally
accepted score that signals the presence of a troubling level of multicollinearity. In the
economics course, all twenty-six learning style variables had VIF scores well above the
acceptable limit and in the accounting course, ten of the learning style variables were above the
acceptable limit. The covariance matrix of all twenty-six learning style variables also was
analyzed to identify pairs of variables whose correlation coefficient exceeded 0.40, a
significantly high value. In addition to the variables that obviously are highly collinear by virtue
of the nature of the DDLSM (e.g., the different time-of-day preferences), variables within and
among learning style categories with both exceedingly high VIF scores and pair-wise correlation
values were excluded from the final version of the regression model.
The resultant regression model included eighteen of the twenty-six learning style
variables. The VIF scores for all the resultant learning style variables were below the critical
value of ten, the standard errors of the estimated coefficients were substantially reduced and,
therefore, the explanatory power and reliability of the student achievement regression model
were increased. The forward and backward stepwise regression methods were applied and the
results were consistent with the inclusion of the resultant eighteen learning style variables,
instead of the total twenty-six learning style variables, in the regression model. These results
indicate that the methodology applied to refine the list of learning style variables provided a
reasonable method of dealing with the inherent multicollinearity.

6 International Journal of Education Research Volume 7, Number 1, Spring 2012
EMPIRICAL RESULTS

The results for the economics and accounting regressions are summarized in Tables 1 and
2, respectively. The explanatory variables are reported in descending order of relative
importance, as determined by the standardized regression method. In the principles of
economics course, the adjusted R-squared was .49, a relatively high number for student
production function regression models of this sort. In the studies by Terregrossa, Englander and
Wang (2009a) and Englander, Terregrossa and Wang (2009b), which utilized the PEPS
instrument that reflected the earlier version of the DDLSM, the adjusted R-squared was .27 and
.22, respectively. The increase in explanatory power may be attributed to the greater accuracy
that Morten-Rias et al. (2008)
Table 1
Economics Student Achievement Regression Results
Variable
Parameter
Estimate
Standard
Error t-Value Pr > |t|
Standardized
Estimate VIF Score
Intercept 84.69 4.56 18.58 <.0001 0 0
Tactile/Kinesthetic 0.72 0.20 3.61 0.001 0.69 5.79
Intake 0.52 0.17 3.09 0.003 0.61 6.16
Mobility -0.43 0.15 -2.91 0.005 -0.53 5.20
Light 0.41 0.12 3.40 0.001 0.48 3.17
Alone/Pairs -0.56 0.29 -1.94 0.057 -0.48 9.72
Persistence -0.50 0.18 -2.75 0.008 -0.47 4.61
Authority 0.48 0.18 2.73 0.008 0.46 4.53
Visual-Picture -0.45 0.20 -2.26 0.028 -0.39 4.81
Auditory -0.34 0.13 -2.50 0.015 -0.36 3.23
Motivation 0.33 0.24 1.36 0.180 0.32 8.73
Variety -0.34 0.27 -1.26 0.212 -0.25 6.23
Informal Seating 0.22 0.09 2.42 0.019 0.24 1.51
Test Dummy1 -6.41 2.69 -2.38 0.021 -0.22 1.33
Gender 6.00 4.55 1.32 0.192 0.20 3.58
Test Dummy2 -5.44 2.69 -2.02 0.048 -0.19 1.33
Late Morning 0.10 0.16 0.62 0.536 0.08 2.87
Structure 0.06 0.13 0.46 0.647 0.08 4.71
Sound -0.05 0.12 -0.46 0.646 -0.07 3.79
Conforming 0.05 0.14 0.39 0.697 0.05 3.05
Temperature 0.03 0.16 0.18 0.856 0.03 3.98
Visual-Text 0.02 0.09 0.22 0.829 0.03 2.22
F-statistic =4.69 P-Value =.0001 R
2
=0.6252 Adj. R
2
=0.4918
Standard Error of Estimate =9.893 Coefficient of Variation =12.865

International Journal of Education Research Volume 7, Number 1, Spring 2012 7
attribute to the BE survey as compared to the PEPS instrument. The value of the F-statistic,
4.69, is statistically significant ( = .0001) and indicates that the model explains a large
proportion of the relative variance of economics students test performance.

Table 2
Accounting Student Achievement Regression Results
Variable
Parameter
Estimate
Standard
Error t-Value Pr > |t|
Standardized
Estimate VIF Score
Intercept 72.99 7.56 9.65 <.0001 0 0
Persistence 0.84 0.18 4.76 <.0001 0.63 3.93
Test Dummy1 20.71 3.59 5.77 <.0001 0.47 1.50
Tactile/Kinesthetic -0.58 0.23 -2.53 0.013 -0.36 4.61
Auditory 0.33 0.17 1.97 0.052 0.35 7.09
Late Morning -0.57 0.15 -3.72 0.000 -0.35 1.97
Temperature -0.34 0.16 -2.11 0.038 -0.28 4.05
Visual-Text -0.30 0.18 -1.67 0.097 -0.26 5.35
Gender 9.34 4.27 2.19 0.031 0.24 2.68
Test Dummy3 10.41 3.59 2.9 0.005 0.24 1.50
Variety -0.43 0.21 -2.09 0.039 -0.22 2.57
Authority 0.28 0.21 1.34 0.184 0.19 4.47
Test Dummy2 7.88 3.59 2.2 0.030 0.18 1.50
Alone/Pairs 0.40 0.19 2.07 0.040 0.17 1.52
Visual-Picture 0.26 0.18 1.43 0.156 0.15 2.59
Intake 0.14 0.09 1.55 0.125 0.15 2.00
Conforming 0.18 0.17 1.04 0.301 0.12 2.84
Structure -0.10 0.12 -0.82 0.414 -0.08 2.24
Motivation -0.14 0.24 -0.57 0.570 -0.08 4.62
Informal Seating 0.13 0.17 0.76 0.447 0.07 1.87
Mobility -0.08 0.13 -0.61 0.542 -0.07 2.79
Sound -0.06 0.11 -0.53 0.596 -0.06 2.82
Light -0.06 0.10 -0.6 0.548 -0.06 1.97
F-statistic =4.96 P-Value =.0001 R
2
=0.4914 Adj. R
2
=0.3923
Standard Error of Estimate =14.798 Coefficient of Variation =18.896

Several learning style variables contributed significantly to student achievement in the
economics course. In descending order of importance, the tactile/ kinesthetic, intake, light and
authority variables were positively and significantly ( =.01) correlated, the mobility and
persistence variables were negatively and significantly ( =.01) correlated, and the visual-picture
and auditory variables were negatively and significantly ( =.05) correlated with student
achievement. The last finding is particularly revealing because, as Becker and Watts (2001)
report, the teaching method predominantly used by instructors in the principles of economics
courses is the lecture format supported by written notes and graphs drawn on the board. This
method of instruction is discordant with this sample of students learning styles and, according to
8 International Journal of Education Research Volume 7, Number 1, Spring 2012
the DDLSM, therefore may be an ineffective teaching method. The negative coefficient of the
mobility variable indicates that movement by students in class may be a distraction that
negatively influences student achievement and therefore should be limited. It is noteworthy that
the visual-text variable was rated last in terms of relative importance, indicating that, for this
group of students, reading the material in the textbook contributed the least to student
achievement, ceteris paribus.
Contrary to Durden and Ellis (2003) and Krohn and OConnor (2005), who observed
greater academic achievement by males than females in economics courses, gender did not have
a significant effect on student achievement, ceteris paribus. Although both test dummy variables
were negative and significant ( =.05), indicating that students performed significantly better on
the last exam relative to the first and second exams, they were relatively unimportant variables,
ranked thirteenth and fifteen, respectively. In the accounting course, the adjusted R-squared
value, .39, also is comparatively high for student production function regression models. As in
the case of the economics regression model, the relatively strong explanatory power of the
accounting regression model may be attributed to the increased accuracy of identifying students
learning styles associated with the BE survey as compared to the PEPS instrument. The value of
the F-statistic, 4.96, is statistically significant ( = .0001) and indicates that the model explains a
large proportion of the relative variance of accounting students test performance.
Several learning style variables contributed significantly to the accounting students
academic achievement. Listed in descending order of importance, the positive coefficients for
the persistence and auditory variables indicated that students performed better when they started
and finished one project at a time, and from listening to the professors lectures. The negative
coefficient for tactile and/or kinesthetic variables indicated that students did not prefer to learn
accounting by actually creating balance sheets or other financial statements. The negative
coefficients for the late-morning and temperature variables indicate that students perform better
learning either earlier or later in the day and in a cooler environment. The negative coefficient
for the visual-text variable indicates that students achievement is negatively affected by relying
on written notes on the board or reading chapters in the textbook. The negative coefficient of the
variety variable, ranked tenth, indicates that students prefer a routine teaching method.
With regard to the control variables, gender was significant ( =.05) and ranked eighth in
order of importance, indicating that the male students performed significantly better than females
in the accounting course. All of the coefficients of the three test dummy variables were positive
and significant. Students performed statistically better on the first exam ( =.01), second exam
( =.05) and third exam ( =.01) relative to the last test. This result may possibly be attributed a
more rigorous final exam or to the students additional burden of having to prepare for and take
several final exams in a short period of time at the end of the semester.
The restricted least squares regression method was used to determine which categories of
learning styles contributed most significantly to the accounting and economics students
academic achievement. The joint F-test suggested by Pindyck and Rubinfeld (1998) was utilized
to determine if each of the six learning style categories had a statistically significant influence on
student achievement. The results of the joint F-tests are reported for the economics and
accounting students in Tables 3 and 4, respectively.
The joint F-test consists of estimating the unrestricted regression model described by
equation (1), retrieving the unrestricted sum of squared residuals (SSR
UR
), then partitioning the
unrestricted model into the six learning style categories (see Learning Styles sub-heading) and
one category for the group of binary variables, excluding a category, estimating the resultant
International Journal of Education Research Volume 7, Number 1, Spring 2012 9
Table 3
Joint F- Test of the Learning Styles Categories in Economics
Strand Restrictions Degrees of
Freedom
F-Statistic P-Value
Environmental 4 4,60 5.66 0.0006
Physiological 6 6,60 4.71 0.0005
Dummies 3 3,60 4.15 0.0098
Perceptual 5 5,60 2.67 0.0305
Emotional 4 4,60 2.49 0.0525
Sociological 5 5,60 1.98 0.0948
Psychological 2 2,60 0.91 0.4088
Notes: 1. J oint F
q,n-k
=[(SSR
R
SSR
UR
)/q]/SSR
R
/n-k. 2. Restrictions equal the number of number of learning style
variables in each category. 3. The degrees of freedom (DF) in the numerator and denominator equal the number of
restrictions and the number of observations (81) less the number of parameters (21), respectively.

Table 4
Joint F-Tests of the Learning Styles Categories in Accounting
Strand Restrictions Degrees of
Freedom
F-Statistic P-Value
Dummies 4 4,114 11.01 1.38E-07
Psychological 2 2,114 6.19 1.21E-05
Physiological 6 6,114 12.05 1.8E-05
Environmental 4 4,114 6.05 0.00018
Sociological 5 5,114 5.20 0.00024
Perceptual 5 5,114 1.96 0.08961
Emotional 4 4,114 1.91 0.11278
Notes: 1. J oint F
q,n-k
=[(SSR
R
SSR
UR
)/q]/SSR
R
/n-k. 2. The restrictions equal the number of number of learning
style variables in each category. 3. The J oint F-test degrees of freedom (DF) in the numerator and denominator
equal the number of restrictions and the number of observations (136) less the number of parameters (22),
respectively.

restricted model and retrieving the restricted sum of squared residuals (SSR
R
). If the excluded
category does not contribute significantly to student achievement, then the difference between
the SSR
R
and SSR
UR
is negligible. If the excluded category does significantly contribute to
student achievement, then the difference between the SSR
R
and SSR
UR
is significant and the
hypothesis that the coefficients of the independent variables that comprise the excluded category
are equal to zero is rejected.
The results of the joint F-test for the economics students indicate that the environmental
and physiological categories have the most important and significant ( = .01) influence on
student achievement, followed by the perceptual category, significant at the five-percent level.
The emotional and sociological categories were significant at ten percent level, and the
psychological category did not have a significant impact on student achievement.
The results of the joint F-tests for the accounting students indicate that four of the six
learning style categories, the psychological, physiological, environmental and sociological
categories, were significant at the one-percent level. The perceptual category was significantly
related to student achievement at the ten percent level, and the emotional category was not quite
significant at that level.
10 International Journal of Education Research Volume 7, Number 1, Spring 2012
Comparison of Business Students Learning Styles

The comparison of students learning styles in alternative business disciplines by Stout
and Ruble (1991) indicated that accounting majors exhibited learning styles that did not differ
from other business majors. The studies by Loo (2002) and Baker, Simon and Bazeli (1986)
concluded that the learning styles of accounting majors differed from other business majors. The
results of this analysis indicate that the learning style preferences and learning style categories
that contribute significantly to academic achievement for the accounting students are similar in
certain ways, but differ in meaningful ways, from the economics students.
Considering first the evidence regarding the learning style categories, both the
environmental and physiological learning style categories significantly contributed to student
achievement for both the accounting and economics students. This result suggests that surveying
students prior to the beginning of the semester to determine their preference for the time of day
that the course is scheduled in addition to their preferences regarding the classrooms
environment (i.e., the sound level, temperature, lighting and seating arrangements) and then
accommodating those student preferences may enhance student achievement in both disciplines.
The emotional category was significant for the economics students but not for the
accounting students, and the psychological category was significant for the accounting students
but not for the economics students. These results suggest that it may benefit accounting students,
but not economics students, to accommodate their preferences for learning style preferences that
distinguish the global, analytic or integrated processing styles, including background sound, light
intensity, seating arrangement, persistence and snacking in class. Similarly, it may benefit
economics students, but not necessarily the accounting students, to address students preferences
for motivation, conformity and internally versus externally imposed structure.
Comparison of students learning style preferences reveals that, although the persistence,
tactile/kinesthetic and auditory learning style preferences contributed significantly to student
achievement in both the economics and accounting courses, the direction of the correlation was
diametrically opposed for all three preferences. This result indicates that accommodating
students preference for persistence may enhance student achievement in both economics and
accounting. However, the positive sign of the coefficient for the accounting students and the
negative sign for the economic students suggest that the pedagogical methods utilized to
accommodate students preference in this case must differ.
Similarly, the tactile/kinesthetic variable was significant and highly ranked for students in
both disciplines, but the opposite signs indicate that the accommodation for this preference must
differ between economics and accounting. The positive sign of the coefficient for the economics
students indicates that utilization of more hands-on learning teaching approach may enhance
student achievement, whereas the negative sign of the coefficient for the accounting students
indicates a less hands-on teaching approach may enhance achievement.
The auditory variable also significantly contributed to achievement for economics and
accounting students, but in opposite ways. The negative sign of the coefficient for the
economics students and the positive sign for the accounting students indicate that the accounting
students academic achievement may be enhanced with greater utilization of lectures as a
pedagogical tool, and less use of lectures may enhance economics students achievement.



International Journal of Education Research Volume 7, Number 1, Spring 2012 11
PEDAGOGICAL ACCOMODATION OF STUDENTS DIVERSE LEARNING STYLES

The negative coefficient of the persistence variable indicates that, for the introductory
macroeconomics students, achievement may be enhanced if the information is presented so that
each lesson focuses on an individual component of a multidimensional model, instead of
analyzing the entire, integrated model. For example, rather than explaining in a single lesson
how the price level in the economy is determined by the forces of aggregate demand and
aggregate supply, it would be more effective to separately analyze the individual components of
the aggregate demand and aggregate supply curves in a series of shorter class sessions.
The initial sessions would focus on the determinants of aggregate demand, including the
levels of expenditures by consumers, businesses, government, exporters and importers. These
sessions would be punctuated with side-bar material such as a review of major historical
events, how the components of aggregate demand and aggregate supply respond to such events,
the process by which such major events influence the nations domestic policies and the specific
difficulties that policy makers encounter in formulating policies to counteract such events. The
following sessions would explain how the slope of the aggregate demand curve is determined by
the wealth, interest rate, and the exchange rate effects. The focus would then shift to an
explanation of how the aggregate demand curve shifts in response to changes in the various
components. The same pedagogical approach would then be applied to analyze aggregate
supply. Finally, by combining the insights gained by the aggregate demand and aggregate
supply lessons, the students presumably would gain a better understanding of the behavior of the
price level. Throughout the analysis, the time spent on one topic should be relatively short, and
students should be allowed to take frequent breaks and to work on several topics simultaneously.
The positive coefficient of the tactual/kinesthetic variable indicates that student
achievement in economics may be enhanced if students are given the opportunity to move while
learning and to manipulate learning resources (e.g., to transfer what they are learning to another
medium) and to participate in real-life activities. One potential teaching method that utilizes all
three of these learning strategies is the team learning method. For example, the team learning
method could be used to teach students about the Great Depression of 1929 and the Great
Recession of 2007-2008. First, the class would be divided into teams of students and the teams
would physically move their seats to form circles. This introduces movement into the lesson.
The instructor would explain that the task for each team is to identify at least three important
causes of the Great Depression, identify any parallels to the Great Recession of 2007-2008 and
make policy recommendations to stimulate employment and economic growth. Students would
be instructed to use their textbooks, the internet or any other available source of pertinent
information. Each group must record the information and then present it to the class. The
instructor should roam the classroom to keep students on task and to answer any questions.
(This introduces externally imposed structure to the task and is consistent with the positive and
significant preference for authority by the economics students). The instructor then divides the
chalk board so that each team can summarize its findings and recommendations. Finally,
students are instructed to grade each teams effort. Utilization of the team teaching method
provides students an opportunity to manually manipulate learning resources, to be mobile within
the classroom, to participate in a discussion regarding an important contemporary issue and
allows for active participation by students in the assessment of what they learned.
The negative coefficient of the auditory variable indicates that student achievement in
economics may be enhanced if the instructor utilizes an alternative to lectures in conveying
12 International Journal of Education Research Volume 7, Number 1, Spring 2012
information. Utilizing written material is ruled out by the insignificance of the visual-text
coefficient; it was ranked last in terms of importance. Likewise, the negative and significant
coefficient of the visual-picture variable indicates that students are averse to graphical analysis.
However, the negative and significant coefficient associated with the tactual/kinesthetic variable
indicates that the team learning approach described above is congruent with the students
preferred perceptual strengths and may be a viable, superior alternative to the lecture format.
With respect to strategies to adapt teaching methods for this sample of accounting
students, a specific teaching method would utilize, for example, a Financial Analysis Project
(Project). During the semester, students learn various financial ratios, which are applied to
income statements and balance sheets. About halfway through the semester students would be
told to select a company of interest to them and analyze the financial health of that firm by
applying the financial ratios to that companys income statement and balance sheet for the
current year and preceding year.
The Project is a long-term assignment that begins at the mid-point of the course and is
due on the last day of class. The Project draws on the students cumulative knowledge from the
first half of the course and requires students to apply financial ratios to a comparative income
statement and balance sheet. Students must determine the significance of improving or
worsening financial trends. Students are also instructed to think of questions they would ask
company management based on the results of the financial analysis. The Project, which requires
the students to invest a considerable amount of time thinking and strategizing, is a teaching
method that takes advantage of the students positive preference for persistence.
In order to understand the purpose and usefulness of the income statement and balance
sheet, students will be confronted with numerous technical materials and concepts. The
instructor, recognizing that these accounting students have a preference for an auditory learning
style, would rely on a lecture and discussion format as an effective approach to communicate key
concepts to students. The instructor develops the lecture so it directly relates to the learning
objective and generates class discussion. Students responses to questions posed by the lecture
would serve as a very important signal as to whether the instructor is getting through.
The instructor would also look for ways to reinforce the content of the lecture. An
effective way of motivating the students to continue to think about these concepts is to assign
homework exercises and problems. However, the negative coefficient for the tactile/kinesthetic
variable indicates that student achievement may not be effectively enhanced by such homework
exercises and problems. One possible approach in overcoming this difficulty would be to
reserve lecture time to discuss the purpose of the homework in terms of what is to be learned,
including detailed discussions of the approaches necessary to complete the exercises and solve
the problems, and describe the problems or exercises as representative of test questions that will
appear on the upcoming exam. In addition, the assignments could be described as a bridge
leading to the content of the next lecture. The strategy of assigning homework, if used in
connection with the lecture as explained here, capitalizes on the learning style preferences for
persistence and auditory learning.

CONCLUSION

An instructor can assess whether a student has or has not learned the material covered in
any discipline by administering a test. However, the students test score, high or low, does not
by itself reveal the factors that contributed to the students performance. Test scores by
International Journal of Education Research Volume 7, Number 1, Spring 2012 13
themselves do not indicate what factors were beneficial to student achievement and what factors
were detrimental. Test scores alone give no indication of whether the teaching method utilized
by the instructor or whether the unique characteristics of the students learning styles contributed
negatively or positively to student achievement.
Instructors may adjust their teaching method in response to students test scores to
enhance their students academic achievement, but this trial and error method of designing an
effective teaching method would likely be ephemeral, changing with every new class of students.
A teaching method discovered by trial and error that is effective with one group of students may
not be effective for another group.
A feasible alternative to the trial and error approach to designing an effective teaching
strategy is to first identify the students learning style characteristics and then determine how the
alternative learning style characteristics affect students academic achievement. The instructor
subsequently could utilize teaching methods that correspond to the learning style characteristics
that correlate positively with student achievement and avoid utilizing teaching methods that
negatively correlate with students academic achievement.
The results of this study support the hypothesis that college students academic
achievement correlates significantly with their learning style characteristics in both economics
and accounting courses. Moreover, in a number of important respects, the learning styles that
characterized the economics students were diametrically opposed to the learning styles that
characterized the accounting students. The implication of these findings is that a one-size-fits-all
approach to teaching is inefficient, and that alternative teaching methods must be designed to
comport with the learning style characteristics of students in alternative disciplines to effectively
promote students academic achievement.
An important conclusion that may be drawn from this study is that, due to differences in
learning style characteristics that exist between students in alternative disciplines, what may be a
productive method of instruction for students in one discipline may be counter-productive if used
in an alternative discipline. Therefore, for any field of study, teaching proficiency and student
achievement may be increased by identifying students learning style preferences prior to the
beginning of the semester and then tailoring pedagogy to closely match students preferences.
Alternatively, once the students learning styles are identified, the students then can be assigned
to an instructor who utilizes a congruent teaching style. Matching learning styles with congruous
teaching methods would improve the efficiency of pedagogical resources utilized by students,
instructors and administrators alike. This paper illustrated how teaching strategies may need to
be adapted to reflect the particular learning styles profile of students in a given class and
provided different pedagogical prescriptions for the students in the introductory economics and
introductory accounting classes.

LIMITATIONS OF THE STUDY

Several possible limitations of this study should be noted. The sample size of economics
and accounting students was twenty-seven and thirty-four, respectively. As a rule, the
generalizability of empirical results may be limited with such small sample sizes. However, the
basic reason the samples were small is that the dependent variable, exam scores, was collected
for two different classes of students. Many colleges aim to maintain such small class sizes.
Although a class taught in a large lecture hall format with 400 students would afford a much
larger sample size, such an environment would change the educational environment. Empirical
14 International Journal of Education Research Volume 7, Number 1, Spring 2012
results flowing from that environment would not necessarily apply to a traditional class of thirty
students.
Another possible limitation to the present study is that the dataset which was made
available to the authors did not include data for (a) student ability (e.g., SAT scores or student
GPA), (b) student time management issues (such as hours per week a student works in the labor
market or hours per week a student devotes to the course at hand) or (c) student behavioral
choices (such as the pattern of alcohol consumption and hours per week of fitness activities).
Previous research by the present authors has examined the influence of these types of variables
on student performance and found them to be statistically significant. It is possible that the
absence of such variables in the present study has contributed to omitted variable bias.

RECOMMENDATIONS FOR FUTURE RESEARCH

The research of this study (as well as much of the earlier learning style related research
presented by the present authors and others listed below) has focused on the impact of learning
style preferences on the grade performance of students. It may be hypothesized that a students
learning style profile also influences other academic outcomes such as a students choice of
major and the success that a student with a given learning style pattern has in a given major (as
measured by grades, whether the student graduates and a students longevity in his/her initial
choice of major). The authors are currently pursuing the data for such a study.

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About the Authors:

Ralph A. Terregrossa is an Associate Professor of Economics at St. J ohn's University in New York City. He holds
a Ph.D. in economics from Binghamton University. He has published articles in The Quarterly Review of
Economics and Finance, International Advances in Economic Research and Educational Review.

Fred Englander is a Professor of Economics at Fairleigh Dickinson University in Madison, New J ersey. He
received his Ph.D. in economics from Rutgers University. He has published articles in the Southern Economics
J ournal, the Business Ethics Quarterly, Science and Engineering Ethics and the J ournal of Education for Business.

Zhaobo Wang is an Associate Professor of Production and Operations Management at Fairleigh Dickinson
University, Madison, New J ersey. He received a Ph.D. in operations research from Rutgers University. He has
published articles in the J ournal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics and the J ournal for Economic Educators.

Theodore Wielkopolski is an Adjunct Professor of Accounting at Fairleigh Dickinson University, Madison, New
J ersey. He is a Certified Public Accountant with twelve years experience in a public accounting firm plus seventeen
years experience as an accounting executive in the manufacturing, construction and real estate industries.

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