People with an accommodative learning style are called Accommodators. They are best at using the Active Experimentation and the Concrete Experience steps in the learning process.
General Characteristics of Accommodators
- They excel in situations where they must adapt to circumstances.
- They have the ability to learn primarily from hands-on experience.
- They enjoy carrying out plans and involving themselves in new and challenging experiences.
- They may have the tendency to act on intuition, trial-and-error, and “gut feel” rather than careful analysis; they tend to be more risk-takers.
- They rely heavily on other people for information rather than their own analytical ability.
- When a thoughtful approach does not seem to be working out, they are quick to discard it and improvise.
- They may have the tendency to concentrate on the urgent aspects of a situation, favouring immediate utility over long-term understanding.
- They are at ease with people, but are sometimes seen as impatient and “pushy”.
Accommodators learn best from:
- New experiences, problems, and opportunities.
- Being engrossed in short “here and now” activities such as business games, team tasks, and role plays.
- Excitement, drama, crisis, unpredictability, and a range of diverse activities to tackle.
- The opportunity to “shine”, when given high visibility.
- Being allowed to generate ideas without constraints of rules, policies, and structure.
- They are thrown into a task that they think is difficult and highly challenging.
- They are involved with other people, brainstorming, problem-solving, and so on, as part of a team.
Accommodators are motivated by:
- Action-oriented or experiential learning.
- Group work.
- Field experiences.
- Interviews.
- Role plays, simulations, case studies, and games.
- Debates.
- Observation and demonstration.
Accommodators learn least from, and may react against activities where:
- Learning involves a passive role like reading, watching, and listening to lectures.
- They are required to stand back and not be involved.
- They are required to assimilate, analyze, and interpret a large amount of data.
- They are required to engage in solitary work.
- They are asked to assess beforehand what they will learn, and afterwards appraise what they have learned.
- They are presented with “theoretical” explanations for cause or justification.
- They are asked to repeat essentially the same activity over and over again.
- They must follow instructions precisely, without room for creativity.
- They are required to attend to detail (dotting “i”s and crossing “t”s).