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BRAIN RESEARCH

BRAIN RESEARCH. FACTS AND IMPLICATIONS. TOPICS. NUTRITION LEARNING EMOTIONAL INTELLIGENCE SLEEP PATTERNS EFFECT OF ENVIRONMENT APPLICATIONS. NUTRITION. Leafy, green vegetables Salmon, lean meat Fresh fruit, nuts Yogurt, low fat milk. NUTRITION.

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BRAIN RESEARCH

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  1. BRAIN RESEARCH FACTS AND IMPLICATIONS

  2. TOPICS • NUTRITION • LEARNING • EMOTIONAL INTELLIGENCE • SLEEP PATTERNS • EFFECT OF ENVIRONMENT • APPLICATIONS

  3. NUTRITION • Leafy, green vegetables • Salmon, lean meat • Fresh fruit, nuts • Yogurt, low fat milk

  4. NUTRITION • Vitamins and minerals can boost learning, memory and intelligence. • Spinach enhances learning • Children should be taught the purpose of eating is nutrition, not to get rid of hunger.

  5. NUTRITION • Water reduces stress • The brain has a higher percentage of water than any other organ • Dehydration rapidly deteriorates brain function • Soft drinks, juice, coffee and tea provide little relief • Dehydration leads to lethargic behavior and impaired learning. • The brain needs eight to twelve glasses of water daily for optimal functioning.

  6. NUTRITION • The brain uses 20% of the body’s oxygen. • Oxygen rich blood is important for learning therefore P.E. classes are important

  7. Learning • A stimulus starts the process • The stimulus is sorted and processed • A memory potential is formulated • Repeating earlier learning is not as beneficial as doing a new activity • New activities produce beneficial chemical activities. • We use less than 1% of the brains processing capacity.

  8. Emotional Intelligence • Emotional intelligence develops early • Early school years may be the time of last resort • Stress/violence cause the brain to develop sites which react quickly to chemical change • Reactivity increases and a child may become aggressive and impulsive

  9. Emotional Intelligence • Children need a flood of information • Television is not good because no time for reflection, interaction or 3 dimensional development is allowed • The vocabulary of television is very fast and children are not ready for it. Television should not be viewed extensively by children until at least age eight • Television may cause stigmas because of flat viewing surface, lack of dimensionality and near focusing

  10. SLEEP • Middle level and high school students have an internal sleep clock which usually doesn’t allow for optimal functioning until 9:00 or 9:30. • Primary school students may be ready by 7:30.

  11. ENVIRONMENT • Positive environments positively influence the brain • Negative environments do the opposite • Avoid finger – pointing, unrealistic assignments or deadlines, humiliation and sarcasm • Music and art lead to improved learning across the curriculum (rate and pattern of brain cell firing)

  12. ENVIRONMENT • Change walls every two to four weeks (have students do the work) • Use computers, group assignments, guest speakers, etc • A genuine high external attention span may last ten minutes • Processing time is then necessary • We continue to process hours after the fact and this is why we sometimes think some of our best ideas come out of the blue

  13. ENVIRONMENT • Discussion time is needed after new learning in order to assist in sorting information

  14. APPLICATIONS • Change locations – part of the brain is specialized to respond to a change in locations (have movement within the classroom for both teacher and student) • Use novelty and ritual in balance • Ritual keeps stress low • Novelty can stimulate

  15. APPLICATIONS • Snacks – small carrots, nuts, and fruit can boost memory • Access to water is crucial • Milk and dairy products produce positive chemical responses

  16. APPLICATIONS • Discipline • Threats, intimidation lead to stress • Watching television, videos, etc. causes stress (eyeballs of the young are soft and can become distorted by continual near focusing) • Unpredictable events cause stress if not meshed with some ritual (remember, some stress is okay, but do not go overboard) • Students from violent backgrounds scan the room looking for “prey”. They are territorial and are some of the kids that fight you for looking at them wrong.

  17. APPLICATIONS • Discipline • Threats come from bullies, parents, boyfriends, girlfriends, humiliating situations, etc. • Teach stress management • Breathing, relationship skills, exercise (walk it off), journaling and creative writing

  18. APPLICATIONS • Discipline • Set clear expectations for behavior • Encourage partnerships that change every three to six weeks so students get to know each other • Do not give threats you will not carry out • Help students set their own behavior goals and life goals • Show connections between actions and outcomes

  19. MEMORY/RECALL APPLICATIONS • Stop every quarter to half page of notes to discuss and reflect • Conduct oral or written review daily and weekly • Repeat key ideas within ten minutes of learning and again within 48 hours • Tie learning together every seven days • Change circumstances, location, etc. • Create theme days to create relevance and form associations

  20. TESTING/ASSESSMENT APPLICATIONS • Learning states and testing states are related so teach or review multiple times in order that the test time matches the learning state (happy, sad, mad, etc.) • Test in same room that the learning took place.

  21. RESOURCES • TEACHING WITH THE BRAIN IN MIND - Eric Jensen • THE LEARNING BRAIN – Jensen • BRAIN BASED LEARNING – Jensen • DIFFERENT BRAINS, DIFFERENT LEARNERS, How to Reach the Hard to Reach – Jensen • LEARNING SMARTER – Michael Dabney and Eric Jensen • 10 BEST TEACHING STRATEGIES – Donna Tileston

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