How does your mind absorb information?
Based on the VARK model. 16 questions. Find out which mode your brain actually uses to learn — and change how you study starting today.
The VARK Model
Four modes. Most students use the wrong one.
VARK identifies your dominant learning channel. Studying through the wrong mode is one of the biggest reasons students feel they’re working harder than their results show.
Visual
Charts · Diagrams · Spatial Layouts
You learn through visual organisation. Text becomes meaningful when arranged as diagrams, maps, or colour-coded structures.
Colour-coded notes stick better than plain text
You prefer diagrams over verbal explanation
Mind maps before writing help you understand
Auditory
Listening · Discussion · Speaking
You learn through listening and speaking. Conversations, lectures, and explaining things aloud help information stick.
You remember conversations better than written notes
Reading aloud helps retention significantly
Group discussion is your most effective study method
Reading / Writing
Text · Notes · Written Summaries
You learn through text. The act of writing consolidates understanding. You prefer textbooks over videos and lists over diagrams.
Detailed written notes are your primary tool
Writing essays clarifies your thinking
You convert diagrams into written descriptions
Kinesthetic
Doing · Practice · Real Examples
You learn through doing. Abstract theory without application feels hollow. You understand by trying before by reading.
Practice problems are where you actually learn
Real-world examples make concepts click instantly
Long passive study sessions drain you quickly
Study Strategies
What to do differently
— by learning style
Knowing your style changes nothing unless you act on it. Here’s exactly how to study differently based on your result.
Visual
Replace linear notes with visual structure
Convert notes into concept maps before exams
Use different colours per subject
Draw diagrams before writing essays
Watch video explanations over pure text
Auditory
Speak and listen your way through material
Record yourself reading notes — replay while commuting
Study in groups where discussion happens
Explain concepts out loud to yourself
Use mnemonic devices and verbal repetition
Read / Write
Write everything in your own words
Rewrite notes after every class — from memory first
Convert diagrams into written descriptions
Bullet-point outlines for complex topics
Comprehensive written summaries before exams
Kinesthetic
Do first. Read theory second.
Start with practice problems before reading theory
Use real-world examples to anchor abstract concepts
Take regular breaks — your brain needs movement
Teach by demonstrating, not just explaining
Questions
Before you start
Yes — most people have a dominant style with secondary strengths. Some students are multimodal — they shift depending on subject or task. This flexibility is actually useful to know about yourself.
Only if you act on it. Most students see measurable improvement within 4–6 weeks of applying the right strategies. The test changes nothing by itself — what changes outcomes is how you study afterwards.
16 questions. 8 minutes. Know exactly how you learn.
Free and instant. Or get a Full Report with all four tests interpreted together by a counsellor.
