Abstract

Good academic performance will occur when learning spaces match or support individual preference and needs. This effect depends on environmental characteristics and individual attributes. Learning styles (LSs) have been used as a tool to capture the behavioral and psychological characteristics of learners in the process of learning activities, which provide instructions to address their learning needs. However, few have focused on the perceptual characteristics of learning space from the view of distinct learning styles. The research aims to identify which kinds of learning spaces in university campus have been preferred by students with different learning styles respectively and the spatial characteristics which have significant influence on the distinct evaluation results; the research consists of 178 college students’ LSs measurement conducted by the Index of Learning Styles questionnaire and their subjective assessment to five typical learning spaces obtained by 5-point Likert-type scale. Then, the key spatial influencing factors were identified by the focus group interviews; the results firstly ranked the learning spaces according to their satisfaction evaluation and restorative potential. The self-study rooms are rated highest, followed by professional classroom, traditional classroom, and multimedia classroom. Then, two dimensions of learning styles were proved as having considerable effects on perception. Specifically, there are significant differences between visual and verbal learners’ evaluations of multimedia classrooms and traditional classrooms, and between global and sequential learners’ evaluations of multimedia classrooms, informal learning spaces, and learning buildings. The other two dimensions including perceiving and remembering have no obvious impacts on learners’ perception of any learning spaces. At last, the important influence factors of perceptions of five typical learning spaces were identified, respectively, and their different effects on various groups were discussed. For example, the serious atmosphere in traditional classrooms was regarded as a motivation for sensing learners but a stress for intuitive learners. The studies emphasize the perceptual difference on learning space in terms of students’ unique learning styles and key points for each kind of learning space with regard to satisfaction of personalized needs. However, before it can be used by designers as tools, more research is needed.

Highlights

  • For the past decade, much attention has been paid on the influence of building spaces on people’s cognitive activities [1–4]

  • Some special spatial characteristics will stimulate the operations of the undirected attention and make it rest, which results in positive changes of mind and body, including mental restoration, stress recovery, efficient cognitive process, good emotions, and so on [5–7]

  • Understanding the proportion of distinct learning styles helps to know the preference of most people, which is useful for designing the suitable learning spaces for different groups

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Summary

Introduction

Much attention has been paid on the influence of building spaces on people’s cognitive activities [1–4]. Some special spatial characteristics will stimulate the operations of the undirected attention and make it rest, which results in positive changes of mind and body, including mental restoration, stress recovery, efficient cognitive process, good emotions, and so on [5–7]. This has become a hotspot especially on the research of official or learning spaces, where people engage in plentiful brain work and suffer from mental fatigue more [8–10]. There is a pressing need to identify the effect of learning space on college students’ psychology and behaviors in order to provide building design strategies at the aim of health promoting and efficient cognitive activities

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