Kolb’s Learning Styles of Centennial Stakeholders as Part of Transition Design Approach in the Social Laboratory Framework

Abstract

Wicked problems are related by many interdependent factors making them seem impossible to solve. Some examples of wicked problems are education models, health care, income disparity, poverty, financial crises, and sustainability, among others. The analysis of wicked problems requires considering many aspects involved, in particular, the level and quality of stakeholder participation. If the stakeholders do not collaborate, it will not be possible to describe the wicked problem in depth, much less propose solutions. To explore the relationship with Centennial stakeholders, this research presents an exploratory, cross-sectional, and quantitative analysis of learning styles according to Kolb's theory for Centennial stakeholders in a Transition Design approach. The results show that there are some predominant learning styles, e.g., Accommodation (LS1) related to feeling and doing, and Diverging (LS3) related to feeling and watching. Then, these learning styles are related to the various practices developed in the Transition Design approach. The conceptual and methodological contribution of the research is also presented, as well as the managerial and policy implications in the framework of a social laboratory. Finally, it is concluded that, according to our survey, Centennial stakeholders have a balance regarding learning styles that must be considered as part of the design of the approach to wicked problems.



Author Information
Sialia Karina Mellink-Méndez, CETYS Universidad, México
Gloria Janeth Murillo-Aviña, CETYS Universidad, México
José Esteban Chapela-Cerecero, CETYS Universidad, México
Josué Aarón López-Leyva, CETYS Universidad, México

Paper Information
Conference: BCE2024
Stream: Learning Experiences

This paper is part of the BCE2024 Conference Proceedings (View)
Full Paper
View / Download the full paper in a new tab/window


To cite this article:
Mellink-Méndez S., Murillo-Aviña G., Chapela-Cerecero J., & López-Leyva J. (2025) Kolb’s Learning Styles of Centennial Stakeholders as Part of Transition Design Approach in the Social Laboratory Framework ISSN: 2435-9467 – The Barcelona Conference on Education 2024: Official Conference Proceedings (pp. 9-16) https://doi.org/10.22492/issn.2435-9467.2024.2
To link to this article: https://doi.org/10.22492/issn.2435-9467.2024.2


Comments & Feedback

Place a comment using your LinkedIn profile

Comments

Share on activity feed

Powered by WP LinkPress

Share this Research

Posted by James Alexander Gordon