Learning preferences of caregivers of asthmatic children.

J Asthma

Section of Allergy/Asthma/Immunology, Children's Mercy Hospital, University of Missouri, Kansas City, Missouri 64108, USA.

Published: October 2005

AI Article Synopsis

  • People have different learning styles, including visual, aural, reading/writing, and kinesthetic, and the clinic uses color-coded Asthma Action Cards to cater to these styles.
  • A survey of caregivers in an asthma clinic revealed that 42% preferred a single learning style, with the majority favoring kinesthetic learning, followed by reading/writing.
  • Most caregivers (82%) valued kinesthetic learning, suggesting that incorporating hands-on methods into asthma education could enhance understanding and adherence to treatment.

Article Abstract

Background: People learn in different ways: visually, aurally, by reading/writing, and kinesthetically. In our clinic, we use color-coded Asthma Action Cards to educate our patients and their caregivers on asthma management. Our teaching is largely aural based, with the cards providing reading and visual stimulation and hands-on practice with devices offering kinesthetic stimulation.

Objective: We sought to determine the learning styles of the caregivers of our asthmatic children.

Methods: Caregivers in our Asthma/Allergy Clinic completed the Visual-Aural-Read/Write-Kinesthetic (VARK) questionnaire anonymously, and the responses were evaluated on the basis of previously validated scoring instructions.

Results: Analysis of 98 respondents showed that 42% had a single learning modality preference, and the remaining 58% were multimodal learners. Of those who reported a single mode of learning, 61% preferred kinesthetic, 27% preferred reading/writing, and less than 1% each preferred aural or visual stimuli. Of all 98 caregivers, 82% included kinesthetic as a learning preference, 59% included read/write, 50% included aural, and 41% included visual.

Conclusion: The majority of caregivers preferred the kinesthetic learning method, whether as a single learning preference or in combination with other approaches. Incorporating kinesthetic methods of learning, such as role plays and problem-solving case scenarios, into standardized asthma education curricula may be beneficial to patients and families in terms of understanding and using their regimen.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02770900500265157DOI Listing

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