I am a teacher with two diplomas, a masters degree, and a Ph. D. and I am a backward learner!
There, I have said it.
It has taken me many years to accept and to understand that I learn backwards. I used to call myself a slow learner and I told people that it was because I was a slow learner that I was really good at teaching children with learning problems. I understood where they were coming from. But calling myself a slow learner never quite fitted. In fact I learn things pretty quickly- my Ph. D. supervisor even called me a ‘quick study’, much to my surprise- but somehow my learning never seemed to produce the results I needed and wanted.
Now, some of you are going to have problems with this post, but stick with me. Most people are forward learners not backward learners like me, and I know from vast experience that forward learners find it very difficult to understand how backward learners function.
It is also very difficult for backward learners to explain why they feel unhappy with the way they learn. But I will do my best.
Backwards learners tend to learn visually. They are good at creating a vision of where they want to be or of what the person is trying to teach them. This is a great skill and to be encouraged. But along with this skill often comes the inability to understand the steps of how you reached that vision. Now i know that forward learners cannot understand how you can have a vision and not know how you got there. But you will have to believe me, you can and backward learners do this all the time.
Let me give you an example. I want to write a book about helping your child succeed in school. I know how to begin and I know where i want to end. The difficulty I have is working out the steps to get from the beginning to the end in a logical fashion. I KNOW that there is a series of logical steps that link the beginning and the end of the book because otherwise how could I have reached a conclusion? But it takes me ages to work them out, and what is worse, they keep shifting!
Another example. I have taught some children who,literally could not read one day and could read the next day. Not for them the slow painful working out what a word said, they either got it or they didn’t. It was as though their brain did not function until it had all the answers it needed to be able to do something. When I asked them why they could suddenly read they had no idea what had happened to make then be able to read. They were backward learners.
Logically I know that their brain was taking in information all the time, but was not ready to use it until it felt it could produce an answer. I understand the feeling. I have to know what i want to say before I say it, I have to have an answer before I start on a discussion, I have to know the result before I do something. ( I always read the last pages of a book shortly after I have started it. I need to know the ending, only then can I really enjoy the book. It drives my husband mad!)
Backward thinkers are not given the respect they deserve!
In a world of forward thinkers the backward thinker can be seen as being indecisive, head in the clouds, unproductive. It can be very disheartening. If your child is a backward thinker he or she may be struggling in a class of forward thinkers, may be thinking that they cannot learn, or even that they are stupid and strange. If your child is a backward learner you need to respect their learning style and help them fill in the steps that got them to their conclusions and visions.
Here are some signs that your child might be a backward learner;
* Daydreams
* Knows what he wants to write but not how to write it
* May have flashes of brilliance
* Grades are lower than you- or he – expected
* Can be exasperating
* Is a strong visual learner
* May like to learn in a messy environment
There is nothing wrong with being a backward learner as long as you know that is how you function. Once a child understands why they are having difficulty learning or producing good work in class they can find ways to fit into the world of forward learners and get recognized for their skills.
If anyone is interested in knowing how to help backward learners let me know and I will post a blog about it.








I can certainly recognize my son George in your profile of the backwards learner. I would be very interested in knowing how to help him learn.
Thanks
Dave
Contact me and we ca discuss options
From reading your post, I’ve now realized that I’m a backward learner. Well I graduated high school at least and now going to college. Plus English is my second language but I’ve been in the states for 7 years. The only problem I have is reading speed and understanding speed. Can anyone help me please? any advices? Tips?
Hi,
my friend has a son, a very cute bright looking child. He faces problem in organizing his thoughts especially when a written project is given. He never finishes given task in a certain amount of time. He is 8 years old and cannot tie his shoelaces. My friend is really in a fix. Is his son a backward learner?
Plz. advise
hello good morning i am kareen, my friend’s sister is really poor academically (all subjects) she is currently 2nd year high school now but inst learning anything, i tried to test through an advance elementary book (home school type) the subject is English, i was so distracted when she cannot understand what is the instruction, and how to answer,
and she have this actions that at her must not do…can you help me?
Hi, i was just researching backwards learning wondering if this is why I’m so different from others and stumbled across this page. I have thought this way my whole life and struggled through school. I am in my early twenty’s now. When i explain to other people how my mind solves problems or how i come up with answers they just don’t get it. LOL for instance when i found this page the first thing i did was scroll to the bottom to read and them begin bouncing around through the paragraphs. Is there another name for this way of thinking or how the brain works? would definitely like to know how to get more information! Fits me to the T.
Thanks for the comment. Many readers seem to agree with the idea of ‘learning backwards’. I don’t think that there is a specific name for it, I don’t think many people understand it. In my experience only ‘backward learners’ really know what it means.
I have found that people with a visual learning style are more likely to be backwards learners than people with other learning styles. I think it might have to do with the whole visioning thing.
What I do know is that these kinds of learners are bright but never get the recognition they deserve.
You seem happy with the way you learn, enjoy it because it can be a gift. Seeing and learning in ways other then the norm has its advantages.
Take care, and continue learning backwards!