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Inductive vs. Deductive Reasoning


People (you and your professor) and course material may have natural differences in the way that they are orientated (inductive vs. deductive) and tend to communicate information. A mismatch in preferred styles (professor to student, or student and text) in the organization or presentation of the material frequently results in learning difficulty.

Professors with an inductive orientation start with details and gradually build to an understanding of the larger picture. Think of a history course starting with the details of historical events and building to an analysis of the underlying socio-political motivation for those events. Think of a chemistry or biology course and the basics of chemical or cellular structure leading much more complex systems. Some professors prefer to teach in this "facts to ideas" style; some students learn best when they are given enough information to understand how it all adds up.

Professors with a deductive orientation start with intuitive ideas or concepts and illustrate (prove) them with supportive information or facts. Think of a macro-economics class discussing money supply, interest rates, and producer price indices. Think about your social science, philosophy or political communication classes. Some students learn best when they hear the big idea first and explore the relationship of that idea with other known facts/concepts (for some students, too many details get very old, very fast.)

Which style of organization and presentation was used on this page? (Answer: Deductive.)
 
 


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