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Brain Research and Learning Theory

Brain Research and Learning Theory. By Caleb Cheung June 19, 2007. What’s Ahead. Brain Facts Basic Brain Anatomy Recent Research Application to Teaching. Warm Up. What do you know about your brain? What was learning in school like for you?

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Brain Research and Learning Theory

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  1. Brain Research and Learning Theory By Caleb Cheung June 19, 2007

  2. What’s Ahead • Brain Facts • Basic Brain Anatomy • Recent Research • Application to Teaching

  3. Warm Up What do you know about your brain? What was learning in school like for you? • Think about a positive memory of a teacher or classroom experience • Think about a negative memory of a teacher or classroom experience. • How old were you? • Cognitive (mind) vs. Emotional (heart)

  4. Basic Brain Facts • Grapefruit to cantaloupe sized • Weighs ~3 pounds • Texture of soft butter • Full of wrinkles or folds to maximize surface area • Unfolded it’s the size of a newspaper

  5. Basic Brain Facts Contents: • 78% water • 10% fat • 8% protein Made of: • 100 billion Neurons – process and transmit information • 1-5 trillion Glial Cells – provides support

  6. Brain Anatomy • Cerebrum • Cerebellum • Limbic System • Brain Stem

  7. Cerebrum Receives, categorizes, and interprets information. Involved in rational decisions and activation of behavioral responses. Right – processes information as a whole, in random order, and spatially (creative), controls movement on the left side Left – processes information in parts, sequences, and language (logical), controls movement on the right side

  8. Cerebrum • Frontal Lobe – judgment, creativity, problem solving, planning, short term memory • Parietal Lobe – higher sensory and language functions • Temporal Lobe – hearing, memory, and language • Occipital Lobe – vision

  9. Cerebellum A computing machine for perception and motor control

  10. Limbic System (inner brain) Principal regulator of emotions, filters information before it reaches the cerebrum.

  11. Limbic System (inner brain) • Hypothalamus – Asks “What is happening inside?” Monitors regulatory system, automatic functions, emotions, “flight, fight or freeze”. • Thalamus – Asks “What is happening outside?” Relays all incoming sensory information. • Amygdala – Brain’s 911 system, reacts to incoming survival and emotional information. Encodes emotional messages to memories for long term storage. • Hippocampus – Plays a principle role in learning and memory. Checks new information with stored experiences. Creates new meaning, converts short term to long term memory.

  12. Recent Research • Adaptability (plasticity) – the brain changes constantly and grows new neurons potentially at all ages. It is influenced by our actions, experiences, and the environment. • Integration – brain structures compete and cooperate, the limbic system can be a gate keeper to learning. • Sophistication – the brain is highly complex.

  13. Information Processing Model

  14. Learning is like falling in love • Attraction – spark • Dating • Exclusive dating • Engagement • Marriage • Mature Relationship

  15. What does this have to do with our teaching??? At age 5-12 (elementary & middle school, the brain has learned language and motor skills, now it’s concerned with active exploration, ready to take on new challenges, develop new interests.

  16. Classroom Strategies • Water • Movement • Engagement • Emotional State • Memory • Repetition • Music • Rewards

  17. Importance of Water • If your body needs water, your brain starts to shut down. • We have an electrical systems in our body. Water helps our cells talk to each other. • If our brain was a computer, we would plug it in to get electricity… for the electricity to work in our brain, we need water. • The more water you drink, the more energy you have. • “Brain Juice”

  18. Water • Most people are dehydrated • Sipping little bits at room temperature all day • Water conducts electricity – without it, there is a short circuit • Formula - Half your weight in ounces each day • Stress depletes the body of water – increase the amount when under stress • All academic skills are improved • Improved concentration, mental and physical coordination • Lack of water is the number 1 trigger for daytime fatigue

  19. Movement Exercise is strongly correlated with increased brain mass, mood regulation, new cell growth, and cognition

  20. Stretches

  21. Silly Sports and Goofy Games • Find a partner • Decide whose birthday comes first (January – December) • The one whose birthday comes last holds the invisible ball • Catch, basketball, tennis, baseball, racquetball, soccer….

  22. Engagement • Student choose relevant and meaningful learning activities. • Avoid embarrassment, failure, or harm. Help students feel safe. • Keep direct instruction short: 8-15 minutes.

  23. Engagement

  24. Emotional States • Occur in the lower part of the brain • Four basic states • Fear/Threat - Fight, flight, or freeze • Joy/Pleasure • Sadness/Disappointment • Anticipation/Curiosity • Not who we are, transient

  25. State Changes • Find a new seat • Inside to outside • Large group to small group • Find three people who…. • Exchange some high fives • Put your pencil in the air • Thumbs up • Imagine…

  26. Recap • Turn to the person sitting next to you, in front of you, or behind you • Tell them 2 new things you could incorporate into your classroom • Tell them the 1 thing you found most useful

  27. Thank you!

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