Topic 1

Learning Styles — VARK Model

How students prefer to receive, process, and retain information — and what it means for how teachers should teach.

A. The VARK Model

What is VARK?

VARK is a model of learning preferences developed by Neil Fleming in 1987 (New Zealand). It does not describe how smart a student is — it describes how they prefer to take in and communicate information. The acronym stands for four primary learning modalities.

LetterStyleWhat It MeansKey Words
VVisualLearns best from diagrams, charts, maps, and spatial informationdiagrams, graphs, colour, layout
AAuditoryLearns best through listening — lectures, discussions, podcastslisten, talk, explain, debate
RRead/WritePrefers information in text — reading and writing noteslists, notes, textbooks, essays
KKinestheticLearns through hands-on experience, practice, real-world examplespractice, lab, fieldwork, role-play
V — Visual
MeansDiagrams, charts, maps, spatial layout
Key Wordsgraphs, colour, diagrams
A — Auditory
MeansListening, discussion, verbal explanation
Key Wordslisten, talk, debate, podcast
R — Read/Write
MeansText-based learning, notes, essays
Key Wordslists, notes, textbooks
K — Kinesthetic
MeansHands-on practice, real-world experience
Key Wordspractice, lab, fieldwork, role-play
⚡ MCQ Tip VARK was developed by Neil Fleming in 1987. It describes preference, not ability. Kinesthetic does NOT mean athletic — it means learning through doing, experimenting, and real-world application.

B. Teaching Strategies for Each Style

How to Teach Each Type

A teacher's job is to identify each student's preferred style and adapt instruction accordingly. This doesn't mean teaching separately — it means designing lessons that include all modalities wherever possible.

V
Visual Learner
Show it — don't just say it
  • Use diagrams, concept maps, flowcharts
  • Colour-code notes and materials
  • Smartboards, slides, visual organizers
  • Ask students to draw or sketch ideas
  • Use timelines and graphic organizers
A
Auditory Learner
Let them hear and speak
  • Explain concepts verbally with discussion
  • Group discussions, debates, Q&A sessions
  • Read aloud, recite, use mnemonics
  • Audio recordings, podcasts
  • Encourage students to explain back in their own words
R
Read/Write Learner
Give them text to read and write
  • Assign textbook readings and written summaries
  • Note-taking, making lists and outlines
  • Written assignments, essays, reports
  • Definitions, glossaries, annotations
  • Ask students to rewrite content in their own words
K
Kinesthetic Learner
Let them do and experience
  • Lab work, experiments, hands-on activities
  • Field trips, real-world examples
  • Role play, simulations, demonstrations
  • Project-based tasks with physical output
  • Manipulatives: models, specimens, tools

C. Multimodal Learners & Important Clarifications

Key Points for MCQs

ConceptExplanation
Multimodal learnerA student who uses more than one VARK style — this is the most common type of learner
VARK ≠ IntelligenceVARK describes preference, not ability or IQ. A Kinesthetic learner is not less intelligent
VARK ≠ FixedLearning preferences can change over time and depend on the subject or task
Teacher's roleIdentify preferences and create inclusive lessons that address multiple styles simultaneously
Kinesthetic ≠ Physical activityK means learning through experience and practice — it's not just movement, it's doing and applying
⚡ MCQ Tip Most learners are multimodal (they use more than one style). VARK does NOT define intelligence — only preference. Neil Fleming developed VARK in 1987. Kinesthetic = hands-on, not just physical.

Quick MCQ Revision

FactDetail
Developer of VARKNeil Fleming — 1987 (New Zealand)
V stands forVisual — diagrams, charts, maps
A stands forAuditory — listening, discussion, lectures
R stands forRead/Write — text, notes, lists, essays
K stands forKinesthetic — hands-on, practice, real-world
Most common type of learnerMultimodal (uses more than one style)
What VARK does NOT defineIntelligence — only preference
Teacher's role with VARKIdentify each student's style and adapt instruction
Key