Todd: Well I guess I'm maybe kinesthetic, that's movement, right, or doing things with your hands.
Julia: Yeah, I think so or even your whole body?
Todd: I don't know. Is kinesthetic using your hands or is it your whole body? Or does it matter?
Julia: I'm not sure it matters. Perhaps there's two different types. I know there's something called TPR when we teach English, total physical response.
Todd: Right. So that would be kinesthetic?
Julia: That's maybe kinesthetic, that's where you give an instruction and the student performs the task and they use the whole body in that case but it can just be your hands or a body part. I think it's both.
Todd: Yes, I think so, yeah. Yes, I mean, so basically if I do it like if I somehow have to make it or if I'm moving, I definitely think I learn better. You know, I learned how to do everything for web design and stuff like that by I think just moving the mouse, click here, click there, type here, type there, whereas like reading it from a book I just, you know, I couldn't learn it that way. So maybe, maybe, I'm kind of that way. The same with cooking, you know, like I have to do it. If I don't do it I'm not going to remember it. I just can't read a recipe and cook. So I think maybe the other thing I would be, would be, I guess would be an aural learner or auditory learner. So basically through hearing.
Julia: My husband's the same, yeah.
Todd: Yeah.
Julia: He can hear a sentence, hear a new word, and remember it just from his ears.
Todd: Really?
Julia: Yeah.
Todd: That's good.
Julia: That's very good, yeah.
Todd: Like I love podcasts and I love hearing things, that's probably why I have this website. I don't like reading too much. I do read and I actually don't even like watching TV very much. I don't like watching movies very much.
Julia: Really?
Todd: No. I would actually much rather listen to a radio program, a good podcast, than watch a movie.
Julia: You see when I listen to a podcast...
Todd: While I'm walking.
Julia: There you go, definitely kinesthetic. If I listen to a podcast, I get a little bit frustrated that I can't see the people speaking.
Todd: Really?
Julia: It frustrates me a little bit that I can't see the faces when they're talking, when I don't know what they look like.
Todd: Oh, I never even thought of that. Yeah, I just don't even care.
Julia: I need to, I need visual input in order for it to, I don't know, go into that part of my brain where it stays, where it stores maybe.
Todd: So we're definitely two different types of learners?
Julia: Absolutely, yes.