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Your Brain and Learning

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Title: Brain Based Teaching and Learning Author: Jan Hayes Last modified by: Michelle Smith Created Date: 9/6/2005 6:05:06 PM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Your Brain and Learning


1
Your Brain and Learning
2
Before We Get Underway
  • WHAT DO YOU THINK?
  • Can your brain grow new cells?
  • Does what you eat and drink affect your brain?
  • Does stress affect learning?
  • Does exercise help me learn?
  • Can I study effectively with TV and music on?

3
Our Brains
  • All parts of the brain participate
  • with each other, while each has
  • its own function
  • There is natural pruning or neural
  • pruning that occurs when parts are not used
  • LEARNING IS A DELICATE, BUT IS A POWERFUL
    DIALOGUE BETWEEN GENETICS AND THE ENVIRONMENT
    Robert Sylwester, A Celebration of Neurons

4
Brains Complexity
  • Cellular level - three pints of liquid, three
    pounds of mass, tens of billions of nerve cells
    (or neurons
  • Brain cells - 30 thousand neurons (300,000 glial
    cells) fit into the space of a pinhead.

5
Parts of the Brain
  • Brainstem (survival )
  • Cerebellum ( autonomic nervous system)
  • Limbic system (emotion)
  • Cortex ( reason/logic)

6
  • Frontal lobe - Cortex
  • Creativity - Judgment - Optimism - Context
  • Planning - Problem solving - Pattern making
  • Upper temporal lobe - Wernickes Area
  • Comprehension - Relevancy - Link to past
    (experience) - Hearing - Memory - Meaning
  • Lower frontal lobe - Cortex
  • Speaking/language - Brocas area
  • Occipital lobe - Spatial order
  • Visual processing - Patterns - Discovery
  • Parietal lobe
  • Motor - Primary Sensory Area - Insights -
    Language functions
  • Cerebellum
  • Motor/motion - Novelty learning - cognition -
    balance - posture

7
Movement and joint positions
Motor cortex
Somatosensory cortex
Sensory associative cortex
Pars opercularis
Visual associative cortex
Brocas area
Grammar and word production
Visual cortex
Primary Auditory cortex
Cerebellum
Wernickes area
Language and Thought
8
Fig. 49-17
Max
Hearing words
Seeing words
Min
Generating words
Speaking words
9
Pineal gland
mid brain
cerebellum
10
Limbic System
11
Neurons
  • Connect to other neurons to muscles or glands
  • Send and receive chemical information (messages)
    for behaviors
  • Can be a millimeter in length or as long as a
    meter

12
How the Brain Determines Whats Important
  • Emotion and attention are the PRINCIPAL processes
    of the brain
  • Primary emotions - innate responses
  • Assemble life-saving behaviors quickly
  • Secondary emotions - also innate reactions
  • Enjoyment, pleasure
  • Students need to talk about their emotions
  • Games, cooperative learning, field trips,
    interactive projects, use of humor
  • Limit emotional stress

13
Twelve Basic Principles Related to Learning
  1. Brain is a parallel processor
  2. Learning engages the entire physiology
  3. Learning is developmental
  4. Each brain is unique
  5. Every brain perceives and creates parts and
    wholes simultaneously
  6. Learning always involves conscious and
    unconscious processes

14
  1. The search for meaning is innate
  2. Emotions are critical to learning
  3. Learning is enhanced by challenge and inhibited
    by threat
  4. The search for meaning occurs through patterning
  5. We can organize memory in different ways
  6. The brain is a social brain

15
The Brain is a Parallel Processor
  • Both hemispheres work together
  • Many functions occur simultaneously
  • Edelman(1994) found when more neurons in the
    brain were firing at the same time, learning,
    meaning, and retention were greater for the
    learner.

16
Learning Engages the Entire Physiology
  • Food, water, and nutrition are critical
    components of thinking.
  • We are holistic learners - the body and mind
    interact

17
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.

18
Each Brain is Unique
  • We are products of genetics and experience
  • The brain works better when facts and skills are
    embedded in real experiences

19
Learning Environment
How the physical environment is organized makes a
difference.
20
Learning Environment
  • Finding a good place to study
  • Quite
  • Free of interruptions
  • Prepared with supplies/organized

21
Knowing Your Learning Styles
  • Auditory
  • Visual
  • Kinesthetic

22
Tips for Auditory Learners
Relate most effectively to the spoken word Often
information in the written form will have little
meaning until it has been heard
  • Use tapes for reading and class lectures
  • Sit where you can hear well (front and center)
  • After you have read something, summarize it and
    recite it back to yourself
  • Learn by participating in discussions
  • Find a friend/classmate who will tell you what
    they learned from the textbook readings

23
Tips for Visual Learners
Relate best to written information, notes,
diagrams and pictures
  • Look at all study materials (charts, maps,
    movies, notes and flash cards)
  • Take good notes, after class fill in sentences
    and compare notes with other students
  • Write out everything for frequent and quick
    visual review
  • Practice visualizing or picture words, concepts
    and even spelling in your head
  • Color Code to organize
  • Ask for written directions

24
Tips Kinesthetic Learners
Relate best to information received thorough
movement or when physical activity is involved
  • Learn skills by imitation and practice
  • Trace words as you are saying them
  • Facts that must be learned should be written
    several times
  • Taking and keeping good lecture notes will be
    very important
  • Make good study sheets
  • Take frequent breaks in study periods
  • Use a computer to reinforce learning (sense of
    touch)
  • Memorize or drill while walking or exercising

25
  • Useful record
  • Of important points for future use
  • Of where the information comes from
  • B. Helps writing
  • Helps ideas flow
  • Helps planning- you can see what info you have
  • Assists in organization- you can rearrange and
    renumber notes in a new way
  • Helps you get started

Why Take Notes
  • E. Helps exam revision
  • Material is well-organized
  • More info is already in memory
  • C. Helps understanding
  • If you focus on selecting info to note
  • If you think through where everything fits
  • D. Helps memory
  • Summing things up briefly helps long-term memory
  • The act of writing helps motor memory
  • Pattern notes can be more memorable visually

26
Listen to case studies ID complementary examples
Only make notes on the impt. points
Have file for each module to keep your notes
organized in
Highlight references made by the lecturer and
follow them up.
Taking Notes in lectures presentations
Develop your own shorthand
Note all words you dont understand and follow
them up.
Write up your notes after the lecture if they are
messy or incomplete
27
The Search for Meaning Is Innate
  • Each person seeks to make sense out of what
    he/she sees or hears
  • Capitalize on this quality!
  • Present ideas, experiences that may NOT follow
    what one expects
  • Speculate Question
  • Experiment Hypothesize

28
Learning is Enhanced by Challenge Inhibited by
Threat
  • 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

29
Stress Learning
The stress-brain loop
? Attention ? Perception ? Short-term memory ?
Learning ? Word finding
Cellular changes in the hippocampus
Increases glucocorticoids
  • Chronic Stress
  • Inadequate sleep
  • Poor nutrition
  • Emotional distress

Decreased regulation of cortisol
30
(No Transcript)
31
Brain Organizes Memory In Different Ways
  • Retrieval often depends upon how the information
    was stored.
  • Relevancy is one key to both storage and
    retrieval
  • Provide and get examples
  • Connect to what students know, what they are
    interested in
  • Make learning meaningful

32
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!!
  • Storytelling - Conversations
  • Debates - Role playing
  • Simulations - Songs
  • Games - Films

33
Learning Memory
Stimulus
Sensory organs
perception
Sensory Memory (millisecond-1)
 
attention
Short-Term Memory Working Memory (lt 1 minute)
forgetting
repetition
Long-Term Memory ( days, months, years)
34
Learning Memory
  • Sensory Memory
  • A sensory memory exists for each sensory channel
  • iconic memory for visual stimuli
  • echoic memory for aural stimuli
  • haptic memory for touch
  • Information ?sensory memory? short-term memory by
    attention, thereby filtering the stimuli to only
    those which are of interest at a given time.

35
Learning Memory
  • Short-term Memory
  • acts as a scratch-pad for temporary recall of the
    information under process
  • can contain at any one time seven, plus or minus
    two, "chunks" of information
  • lasts around twenty seconds.

QUIZ NEXT SLIDE
36
Short-term Memory Quiz (30 sec)
brainflagtrialpartnerhouselifechair
eggsdrawingrockapplefocusmissionfavorice
37
Learning Memory
  • Long-term Memory
  • intended for storage of information over a long
    time.
  • Short-term?long-term (rehearsal)
  • Little decay
  • Storage
  • Deletion- decay and interference
  • Retrieval-recall and recognition

38
Learning Memory
  • Long-term Memory
  • Why we forget
  • fading (trace decay) over time
  • interference (overlaying new information over the
    old)
  • lack of retrieval cues.

39
Techniques to Help Memory
  • Encoding in Long-term Memory
  • Organizing
  • Practicing
  • Spacing
  • Making meaning
  • Emotionally engaging

40
Techniques to Help Memory
  • Define the gist - OVERVIEW
  • Sequence events
  • Plot out pictorially the information
  • Tell the information to others in own words -
    TALK
  • Peer teaching/tutoring
  • Amplify by giving examples
  • Use multiple parts of the brain (emotional,
    factual, physical)
  • Auditory, Visual, Kinesthetic, Talk
  • Combine
  • Use color effectively
  • Yellow and orange as attention-getters

41
The Brain is a Social Brain
  • 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.
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