BENEFITS OF LEARNING AND Kolb’s LEARNING CYCLE FOR ORGANIZATIONAL PERFORMANCE
Kolb’s Learning Model…
Importance of experiential learning
1. Orientation - Students become familiar
with the subject matter through experience (real world) and reflection.
2. Cognitive Processing - Students actively engage in the
material through hands-on activities.
3. Retrieval - Students recall the content through memory
and repetition.
4. Consolidation - Students integrate the new information
into long term memory.
5. Motivation & Evaluation - Students evaluate whether
the activity was worthwhile.
6. Integration - Students synthesize the new information into
existing knowledge.
7. Application - Students apply the new information to solve problems.
8. Exploration - Students continue to explore the topic
further
Kolb’s
Learning Style
In addition to the experiential Learning
cycle, David Kolb also developed learning styles to illustrate different ways
people naturally take in information.
Kolb’s
four learning styles are Diverging (feeling and watching), Assimilating
(watching and thinking), Converging (doing and thinking), and Accommodating
(doing and feeling). In Kolb’s theory, people tend to favor one of these four
distinct styles, impacting how they learn.
Stages of Kolb's
Experiential Learning Cycle?
- Concrete
Experience - At this stage, the
learner shows personal involvement with others in everyday situations. In concrete situations,
learner tends to depend more on feelings, open-mindedness, and adaptivity
to change, rather than on a systematic approach to situations and
problems.
- Reflective Observation -
At this stage, learners understand situations and ideas from different
points of view. They depend on objectivity, patience, and careful judgment
but do not essentially take any action. The learners create an opinion on
basis of their feelings and thoughts.
- Abstract Conceptualization - At
this stage, learners use ideas, logical approaches,
and theories, rather than interpersonal issues or feelings, to understand
situations or problems. In most cases, they depend on systematic planning
and building ideas and theories to solve practical issues and problems.
- Active Experimentation -
At an active stage, the learners show an active learning experience by
experimenting with different situations. At the active experimentation
stage, the learners take a practical approach, rather than simply observing a
situation.
Application of Kolb’s Model
So, how does Kolb’s model help companies improve their
learning? First, it gives you a proven framework for architecting effective
experiences that take learners through every stage of the learning process. It
also helps you avoid a “one-and-done” approach to learning. Because people rarely
learn something after a single exposure, Kolb’s model helps companies adopt a
more process-focused approach. A constant cycle of learning opportunities for
your team members is what will make them, and by proxy the organization, the
most successful.
Conclusion
While we deeply value David Kolb’s contribution to learning and the experiential learning cycle, we take a different stand on learning styles: we don’t believe that people only learn in these four ways. In contrast to Kolb, we believe all learners benefit from engaging with learning in multiple ways, and the best way to learn something is to have a holistic, well-rounded learning experience. These models may positively impact to organizational performance.
References
Armstrong, P. &
McDaniel, E. (1986). Relationships between learning styles and performance on
problem-solving tasks. Psychological Reports, 59, 1135–1138.
Brookfield, S. (1990). The Skillful Teacher. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass
Freedman, R.D. & Stumpf,
S.A. (1980). Learning style theory: Less than meets the eye. The Academy of
Management Review, 5(3), 445–447.
Peters,
J., Jarvis, P., et al. (1991). Adult Education. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
Rogers, A. (1996). Teaching Adults (2nd ed.). Buckingham: Open University
Press.



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