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Brain-based Learning

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Brain-based education is best understood in three words: engagement, strategies, and principles. Brain-based education is the – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Brain-based Learning


1
Brain-based Learning
  • Brain-based education is best understood in three
    words engagement, strategies, and principles.
    Brain-based education is the "engagement of
    strategies based on principles derived from an
    understanding of the brain."

2
Brain-Based Learning
  • Taking what we know about the brain, about
    development and about learning and combining
    those factors in intelligent ways to connect and
    excite students desire to learn.
  • Combining emotional, factual and skill knowledge
    into a cognitive tool.

3
Memory/Learning
  • We have at least two ways of organizing memory.
  • Learning means that information is related and
    connected to the learner. If it's not, you have
    memorization, but you don't have learning. There
    are still things we have to memorize, things that
    need to be repeated.

4
Spatial Memory
  • The spatial memory system (or autobiographical
    system) does not need rehearsal and allows for
    instant memory of experiences.
  • We understand and remember best when facts and
    skills are embedded in natural, spatial memory.
  • Spatial memory is generally best invoked through
    experiential learning.

5
Rote Memory
  • The counterpart of the spatial memory system is a
    set of systems designed for storing relatively
    unrelated information.
  • This is the model schools are based on. We have
    limited education to "programming" these systems
    and "teaching to the test." Can you see why
    people would say that our educational system is
    based on teaching to the test (and forgetting it
    afterwards) is not very successful?

6
Memory
  • Short-term memory
  • TO HELP
  • Combine or chunk
  • Recognition
  • Long-term memory
  • Declarative - Factual
  • Episodic - Events or experiences
  • Semantic - Words
  • Procedural - Step by step

7
Memory
  • When objects and events are registered by several
    senses, they can be stored in several
    interrelated memory networks.
  • This type of memory becomes more accessible and
    powerful.
  • Conversation helps us link ideas/thoughts to our
    own related memories. Students need time for this
    to happen!!

8
What You See is What You Get!
9
Learning is developmental.
  • Depending upon the topic some students can think
    abstractly, while others have a limited
    background and are still thinking on a concrete
    level.
  • Building the necessary neural connections by
    exposure, repetition, and practice is important
    to the student.

10
Learning Is Developmental
  • Our experiences stimulate neural development,
    creating a thick forest of branch-like neural
    connections.
  • Because of our experiences, our brains actually
    become denser providing greater capacity for new
    and deeper understanding.

11
Learning Process
12
Learning Strategies
  • The solution is to embed learning by immersing
    learners in well-orchestrated, life-like,
    low-threat, high-challenge learning environments.
  • We need to take the information off the
    blackboard, to make it come alive in the minds of
    learners, and to help them to make connections
    through
  • Storytelling Conversations
  • Debates Role playing
  • Simulations Songs
  • Games Films

13
Continue
  • Show them the BIG picture.
  • Provide challenging assignments that really
    matter.
  • Balance clearly delegated assignments with some
    freedom and flexibility or choice in assignments.

14
Continue
  • The brain develops better in concert with others.
  • When students have to talk to others about
    information, they retain the information longer
    and more efficiently!
  • Make use of small groups, discussions, teams,
    pairings, and question and answer situations.

15
Learning Styles
  • Take a looks at learning styles and unique ways
    of patterning.
  • We have many things in common, but we also are
    very, very different.
  • We need to understand how we learn and how we
    perceive the world and to know that we see the
    world differently.

16
Complex learning is enhanced by challenge and
inhibited by threat.
  • Tie learning to prior knowledge.
  • Use Know - Want to know - Learned cycle.
  • (What the Best College Teachers Do) suggests
    working from big questions to be answered.

17
Learning
  • The brains priority is always survival - at the
    expense of higher order thinking.
  • Stress should be kept to a manageable level
  • Provide opportunities to grow and to make
    changes.
  • Have high, but reasonable expectations.

18
Threat
  • In the classroom, "downshifting" is seen as
    threat related to a sense of helplessness.
  • It has implications for testing and for grading,
    for the notion of the teacher as the controller,
    for empowerment, for performance objectives.

19
Uniquely Organized
  • Every brain is uniquely organized.
  • We all have the same set of systems, but they
    are integrated differently in every brain.
  •  

20
Our Unique Brain
  • We are products of genetics and experience.
  • The brain works better when facts and skills are
    embedded in real experiences.

21
The Brain
22
  • LEARNING IS A DELICATE, BUT IS A POWERFUL
    DIALOGUE BETWEEN GENETICS AND THE ENVIRONMENT
    Robert Sylwester, A
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