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Learn about the unique characteristics of teenage brains and how they affect learning. Discover strategies to help students manage stress and improve performance in the classroom.
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Teenage Brainsin Your Classroomwith Nicola Morgan Information, classroom materials and free resources: www.nicolamorgan.com
More information • www.nicolamorgan.com • Handouts + this Powerpoint on today’s blog • Lots more free materials • Teaching resources: Brain Sticks, Stress Well for Schools, Exam Attack - (discount on blog today)
To consider today • What’s so special about teenagers? • How this affects learning • Some strategies
Understanding control Aiming for “active agency” Our brains are in our hands
What makes adolescence special? • State of Brain – internal pressures • Stage of Life – external pressures Yes, they are all individuals… But adolescence is biological, natural, universal and positive
Most important brain difference Prefrontal cortex develops last (mid-20s): “control centre” – logic/reason, decision-making, impulse control, prediction PFC Limbic system, with amygdala – emotion, impulse, reward, reaction, instinct
This can affect: • Emotions (volatility / control) • Empathy • Impulse control • Peer pressure behaviour • And risk-taking See Blame My Brain and your handout for references
And… • Sleep changes • Sleep deprivation • Lower performance
First, what is stress? • A positive, biological response to threat • Adrenalin + cortisol • To maximise performance • So, what’s the problem? • Too much reaction panic • Cortisol builds up many negative effects • “Preoccupation”
“Preoccupation” • Brain “bandwidth” is limited • Everything occupies some bandwidth • These occupy a LOT: • Worries • Processing information – learning • Internet + social media – many rapid tasks at same time • Resisting temptation • Any preoccupation lowers performance: • Learning – “cognitive ability” • Behaviour– ”executive control” Daniel Levitin’sThe Organized Mind covers this
Different teenage stressors Think of each “occupying” bandwidth + raising cortisol • Perfect storm of change • A regular school day: • Constant pressure to do better • Friend/peer issues • Self-consciousness • Extra stresses for introverts
Two big modern stresses 1. Exams • High frequency, high pressure • Constant pressure over long period cortisol build-up
2. The Internet + Social Media Internet • Knowledge, BUT…. • Information overload - exhausting • Repetition of bad news emotional effect • And anxiety See The Organized Mind by Daniel Levitin
…and Social Media • Social networking very important, but… • Highly addictive – social + curiosity • More “friends” than we can manage • Competition with perfect images/lives – measuring self-worth by number of “likes” • “Online disinhibition effect” cyber-bullying Irresistible by Adam Alter The Happiness Effect by Donna Freitas
Two big negative results • Digital overload and constant attempts to multi-task: ‘continuous partial attention’ and exhaustion • Theft of time and peace to think: reacting, not thinking; absorbing, not creating
Time for some solutions! • Details in my breakout sessions • And my website and teaching materials
Enable better sleep See my website and handouts for free advice for students (and parents)
Now LOTS of evidence of benefit! Including: • Better results and performance • Reduced stress and greater wellbeing • (Evidence on my website)
Readaxation “The deliberate act of reading for the purpose of relaxation, wellbeing and therefore performance” • Allows engagement/flow • “Narrative transportation” empathy • Escape from worry – reset thinking patterns • Self-chosen, autonomous
1. Respect and cater for introverts • Understandthe differences • Need peace + to be alone sometimes • Often prefer to work alone • Openly discuss and value both types • Adapt some teaching practices • Give students strategies See “Quiet Power – The Secret Strengths of Introverts” by Susan Cain
2. Teach stress management • Educate and empower with strategies • How to recognise symptoms • Educate parents
B: Relaxation wellbeing performance Relaxation is not a luxury
Empower daily relaxation Discuss healthy activities to lower cortisol • Personal choice • Varied – physical and mental • Deliberate extra benefit
Daily relaxation ideas stroke a pet draw daydream music breathe deeply walk SWITCH OFF! read look at nature be alone OR social write bath yoga laugh mindfulness bake
3. Manage screen time • Understand science: why screen-time is a) so tempting and b) a potential problem • Treat it like anything else pleasurable but problematic / addictive: eg sugar • Create good practice – set rules with reasons • Model good practice • Have some screen-free time • Discuss how this feels: “intrinsic motivation”
Understanding control “Active agency” Their brains in their hands Information, classroom materials and school events: www.nicolamorgan.com
Teenage Brainsin Your Handswith Nicola Morgan Information, classroom materials and free resources: www.nicolamorgan.com