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Raising Attainment Brain Compatible Learning

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Title: Raising Attainment Brain Compatible Learning


1
Raising Attainment Brain Compatible Learning
  • Jane Mott
  • Lecturer in Inclusive Studies
  • Contemporary Issues in Home Economics
  • 8 May 2004

2
The Same Old Problem
  • If you are doing something that doesnt work,
    the more you do it or the harder you try to do
    it, the more it doesnt work.
  • Richard Bandler cited in Hook and Vass 2000

3
A New Solution
  • Over 80 of what we know about how the brain
    functions has been discovered in the past 15
    years.
  • Much of what happens in classrooms throughout the
    country conflicts with what is now known about
    the brain and its design.
  • Smith A. 1996 Accelerated Learning in the
    Classroom Network Educational Press Ltd
    Stafford

4
The Brain in Learning
  • The brain is designed for SURVIVAL not for
    learning.
  • The learning experience should be
  • Multi-sensory and holistic.
  • Personalised, attuned to the self-interest of
    the learner.
  • According to the developmental stage of the
    brain.

5
Shaw S. and Hawes T. 1998 Effective Teaching
and Learning in the Primary Classroom - a
practical guide to brain compatible learning. The
Services Ltd Leicester
6
Buzan T. 2000 The Mind Map Book BBC
WorldwideLondon
7
Increasing neural pathways
  • Provide stimulating environment - both physically
    and mentally
  • Repeated stimulation results in more permanent
    connections and faster connections -
    over-learning, enrichment, elaboration,
    multi-sensory
  • Always relate to pupil experience- build on what
    the pupil knows

8
Effective Teaching
  • Is stimulating and relevant
  • Connects to previous knowledge skills and
    understanding
  • Uses on-going formative assessment to ascertain a
    pupils current position in order to build on it
  • Employs differentiation to ensure each individual
    is taught at the appropriate level
  • Encourages the development of higher order
    thinking skills appropriately

9
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10
The Reptilian Brain
  • Survival - fight or flight responses, lashing
    out, screams, flocking
  • Monitoring body functions - breathing, balance,
    instinctive responses
  • Territoriality - defensiveness about
    possessions,friendships, personal space
  • Mating rituals - showing off, attention-seeking
  • Hierarchies - the need to be, or be associated
    with, the gang leader
  • Rote behaviours - behaviours which are
    repetitive, predictable and rarely constructive

11
Acknowledging the Reptilian Brain
  • Allocate territorial space e.G. Peg, drawer
  • Ensure physical comfort - warmth, light, absence
    of hunger and thirst
  • Foster sense of belonging - rituals/team-building
    to confirm identity e.G. Allocated job, opening
    and closing rituals
  • Promote atmosphere of physical and emotional
    safety - this reduces anxiety and promotes
    learning
  • Relaxation techniques - breathing, music,
    classroom management

12
Ways of Reducing Anxiety
  • Have clear expectations - about what you expect
    from the and vice versa
  • Praise - at least 5 times more than you criticise
  • Criticise behaviour not the child
  • Be fair and consistent
  • Avoid sarcasm and derogatory remarks
  • Acknowledge feelings - talk about them and how to
    manage them
  • Teach skills in conflict resolution
  • Listen

13
The Limbic System or Mid-brain
  • Controls emotions via the amygdala
  • Governs sexuality, eating/sleeping patterns,
    immune system
  • Site of long-term memory via the hippocampus
  • Filters information in and out
  • Governs concepts of value and truth
  • Validates knowledge and understanding
  • Actuates our sense of self

14
Acknowledging the Mid-brain
  • Encourage a sense of identity in the learner - he
    is not just a face, meta-cognition
  • Make the learning worthwhile and relevant to them
    personally - whats in it for me? WiiFM
  • The learner themselves should set strong personal
    learning goals
  • Connect in to their values - what do they
    consider interesting and important? CITV
  • Value everyones contribution to raise self-esteem

15
Neo-cortex
  • Divided in to right and left hemispheres
  • Connected via the corpus callosum
  • Cognitive and problem-solving functions
  • Discerns relationships and patterns of meaning
  • Creates personal metaphors or models of
    understanding

16
Functions of the Neo-cortex
  • Seek out patterns and relationships
  • Searches for novelty
  • Looks for relevance for self/value in learning
  • Works on many levels simultaneously
    multi-processing
  • Works in peaks and plateaux, not on one level
  • Works in short spurts of concentration
  • Operates on conscious and unconscious level
  • Needs plenty of stimulation
  • Accesses all the senses
  • Requires feedback
  • Everyone creates their own map or model of the
    world

17
How the Neo-cortex Learns Best
  • Connect todays learning with yesterdays.
  • Use novel or unusual approaches or material.
  • Remember WiiFM.
  • Provide input for all the senses.
  • Build in choices and decision-making.
  • Use open-ended tasks learning is not a linear
    process.
  • Concentration should be in short bursts!!!
  • Make use of unconscious learning e.G. Role play,
    visualisations, using music etc.
  • Build in feedback peer evaluation,
    self-checking.

18
Shaw S. and Hawes T. 1998 Effective Teaching
and Learning in the Primary Classroom - a
practical guide to brain compatible learning.
The Services Ltd Leicester
19
Left-brain Dominant Learners
  • Structured sequential tasks
  • Moving from parts to the whole
  • Explicit instructions
  • Written information
  • Working in a linear way, checking work

20
Right-brain Dominant Learners
  • Open-ended tasks
  • Going from the big picture to the parts
  • Self-selected tasks
  • Working from intuition, guesses, hunches

21
The Male Brain
  • Greater compartmentalisation
  • Larger area for visual/spatial processing
  • Higher level of testosterone
  • Lower level of seratonin
  • Lower level of dopamine

22
The Female Brain
  • Greater networking capacity
  • Larger area for linguistic processing
  • Lower level of testosterone
  • Higher level of seratonin
  • Higher level of dopamine

23
Brain Waves
  • Beta waves characteristic of the conscious
    mind, logical thought, analysis
  • Alpha waves relaxation and meditation for fast
    absorption of facts and processing data
  • Theta waves deep meditation and reverie for
    creativity and inspiration
  • Delta waves deep sleep

24
Reviewing for Effective Recall
  • Present information in short bursts
  • Review regularly
  • Engage the emotions
  • Construct meaning
  • Multi-sensory
  • In context
  • Engages both hemispheres
  • Important and relevant to the individual
  • Connects to prior knowledge
  • Employs memory strategies

25
9 Principles for Brain-based Learning
  • High sensory stimulation and challenge
  • High challenge low threat
  • Feedback
  • Relative lateralisation
  • Diverse teaching strategies
  • Recognising the importance of the affective
  • Music aids learning
  • Types of memory
  • Expectations shape outcomes

26
Conclusion
  • Teachers affect eternity no-one knows where
    their influence stops.
  • Anon
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