Quote:
Originally Posted by rogue_librarian
So you're quoting (blindly, I have to assume) from "Jenny Frost & Tony Turner [eds], Learning to teach Science in the Secondary School"? This book is about "teaching science", not reading per se.
And, no, I don't have any hard numbers either, but my experience shows me that the non-visually-oriented readers are clearly a minority.
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No, I'm not.
That's just one example. If you look, you'll find similar percentages about buyers, movie-goers, salesmen, executives, and so on.
I'm just saying that there are people with different "input channels", and visuals are about one third of them.
Auditive people are not blind. They can see, and they read, also.
But if your experience is different, and you don't have nothing to support it, I'm definitely wrong, and you're right.
You win.
I'm out.
Thank you.