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mardimichels

Science: A New Map of the Human Brain - WSJ.com - 0 views

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    Ideas from "Top Brain, Bottom Brain: Surprising Insights Into How You Think" to be released on November 5 2013.
Jessica Lindsay-Sonkin

How curiosity changes our brains - 4 views

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    A study that shows how curiosity increases the amount of information recalled by the brain, regardless of the subject
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    Very cool, thanks for sharing. Reminds me of the book I'm reading now, The Organized Mind: Thinking Straight in the Age of Information Overload by Daniel Levitin (the author of This is Your Brain on Music).
Ryan Archer

What Checking Email All The Time Does To Your Brain - Business Insider - 2 views

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    Schedule times to look at your email and find ways to clear the clutter. Your brain will thank you for it and you will be much more efficient.
garth nichols

What the Internet is Doing to Our Brains [Epipheo.TV] - YouTube - 0 views

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    Wha the internet is doing to our brains! This is  a great video for all to see!
garth nichols

Math Teachers Should Encourage Their Students to Count Using Their Fingers in Class - T... - 2 views

  • This is not an isolated event—schools across the country regularly ban finger use in classrooms or communicate to students that they are babyish. This is despite a compelling and rather surprising branch of neuroscience that shows the importance of an area of our brain that “sees” fingers, well beyond the time and age that people use their fingers to count.
  • Remarkably, brain researchers know that we “see” a representation of our fingers in our brains, even when we do not use fingers in a calculation
  • Evidence from both behavioral and neuroscience studies shows that when people receive training on ways to perceive and represent their own fingers, they get better at doing so, which leads to higher mathematics achievement. The tasks we have developed for use in schools and homes (see below) are based on the training programs researchers use to improve finger-perception quality.
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  • The need for and importance of finger perception could even be the reason that pianists, and other musicians, often display higher mathematical understanding than people who don’t learn a musical instrument.
  • Teachers should celebrate and encourage finger use among younger learners and enable learners of any age to strengthen this brain capacity through finger counting and use. They can do so by engaging students in a range of classroom and home activities, such as:Give the students colored dots on their fingers and ask them to touch the corresponding piano keys:
  • Visual math is powerful for all learners. A few years ago Howard Gardner proposed a theory of multiple intelligences, suggesting that people have different approaches to learning, such as those that are visual, kinesthetic, or logical. T
  • To engage students in productive visual thinking, they should be asked, at regular intervals, how they see mathematical ideas, and to draw what they see. They can be given activities with visual questions and they can be asked to provide visual solutions to questions.
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    Great article on the strategies and rethinking of them in Math class for younger grades
sallymastro

About Daniel Pink | Daniel Pink - 0 views

shared by sallymastro on 20 Oct 12 - Cached
  • A Whole New Mind: Why Right-Brainers Will Rule the Future charts the rise of right-brain thinking i
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    A provocative read on how brain function has impacted global-economic development.
Marcie Lewis

A New Kind of Tutoring Aims to Make Students Smarter - NYTimes.com - 1 views

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    Tutoring program that aims to improve brain function similar to website Luminocity. 
gmatthews_11

It's not just hormones: What's really happening in the minds of teenage girls... - 1 views

  • It's not just hormones
  • The sudden force of a teenager’s feelings can catch parents off guard because, between the ages of six and 11, children go through a phase of development that psychologists call latency .
  • Compared to the brain activity of children and adults, the teens’ amygdalas reacted strongly to fearful or happy faces.
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  • the brain remodels dramatically during the teenage years.
  • Adults often tell teens that their feelings are at full blast because of “hormones.” This usually doesn’t go over very well, plus it’s probably inaccurate.
  • research suggests that the impact of pubertal hormones on teenagers’ moods is indirect, at best.
  • Here’s the bottom line: What your daughter broadcasts matches what she actually experiences.
  • Really, it’s just that intense, so take her feelings seriously, regardless of how overblown they might seem.
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    Globe and Mail article, excerpt from Lisa Damour's book "Untangled"
garth nichols

How We Learn: Scientific American - 7 views

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    This is the article from Jen Bibby's recent post. She uses this to lay the foundation of her approach to French, but also to pose the question: what 21st century tools allow educators to access and compliment what we know about brain-based learning?
su11armstrong

Better Ways to Learn - NYTimes.com - 2 views

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    "One way to signal to the brain that information is important is to talk about it. Ask a young student to play "teacher" based on the information they have studied. Self-testing and writing down information on flashcards also reinforces learning."
Justin Medved

Thinking Skills Club - Home - 0 views

  • The Brain Puzzle The Thinking Skills Club organizes fun, cognitively enriching games into a curriculum disguised as a brain puzzle. The puzzle pieces fill with colour as games are passed in all 6 areas of the site: Executive Function, Problem Solving, Memory, Processing Speed, Social Skills and Attention.
Rita Pak

Coursera Announces PD Courses for Teachers - 3 views

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    Amazing courses for all teachers.  Topics: Beginner teachers, student thinking, brain & inquiry, art education, literacy, science & society.  All courses are free and between 4-7 wks long
su11armstrong

7 Must-Read Books on Education - 2 views

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    Brain-Pickings List of 7 Must Read Books on Education. Asimov to Gardner.
garth nichols

35 Psychology-Based Learning Strategies For Deeper Learning - 4 views

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    Brain-based learning strategies
garth nichols

Do You have the Personality To Be an Inquiry-Based Teacher? | MindShift - 3 views

  • Are you optimistic? Viewing the world as damaged or the future as bleak shuts down the brain by transmitting fear. Maintaining an optimistic attitude is an expression of love, inspiring curiosity and hope, and fostering emotional and physical health. Optimism is essential to teaching: Without hope, the reason to learn disappears. Are you open? The world is being refreshed and powered by divergent thinking. Outcomes are unclear, even dangerous. But faith in the flexible thinking of the human mind can support young people as they sort out their new world and have the freedom to discover solutions not yet visible. An open attitude activates the frontal lobes, the place of flow and creativity. Are you appreciative? Deep appreciation gives permission for failure, rather than penalizing for the “wrong” answer. It honors the stops and starts of human development. It conveys the ultimate message of a communal world: We are in this together. Are you flexible? In inquiry, the journey matters as much as the destination. Constant reflection is a necessity to improving thinking and doing. Metacognition encourages wisdom, the ultimate goal of any worthy education system. Flexibility tells the brain and heart to keep working, keep going—you’re getting there. Are you purposeful? Purpose binds teacher and student into the high-minded pursuit of solutions that matter. It is the reason that “authentic” education works and inauthentic education struggles. It tightens the connection between the learner and the teacher in ways that spur the natural creative impulse to change and improve the world.
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    This is an important list of attributes for 21st Century Teaching. As schools and teachers are looking to PBL, we often don't think about what is required in the social-emotional realm of teaching that will allow PBL to fly...here's some good info' on this...
garth nichols

Do girls learn differently? - 2 views

  • To hear some ed tech enthusiasts tell it, online learning is sweeping aside the barriers that have in the past prevented access to education. But such pronouncements are premature. As it turns out, students often carry these barriers right along with them, from the real world into the virtual one.
  • These dismally low numbers provide a reminder that “access” to education is more complicated than simply throwing open the digital doors to whoever wants to sign up. So how can we turn the mere availability of online instruction in STEM into true access for female students?
  • One potential solution to this information-age problem comes from an old-fashioned source: single-sex education. The Online School for Girls, founded in 2009, provides an all-female e-learning experience.
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  • But evidence is weak that there is such a thing as “girls’ learning,” online or offline, if what is meant by that is that each gender has cognitive differences that should be accommodated by different instructional methods. Neuroscientist Lise Eliot has argued persuasively that, while small inherent differences in aptitude between males and females do exist (even as infants, for example, boys seem to have an edge in spatial cognition), society takes these small differences and makes them much bigger—by supporting boys in math and science, and by discouraging girls who study these subjects.
  • These same dynamics play out online, as Cheryan demonstrated in a subsequent study. Changing the design of a virtual classroom—from one that conveyed computer science stereotypes to one that did not —“significantly increased women’s interest and anticipated success in computer science,” Cheryan and her colleagues reported.
  • Cheryan notes, “was sufficient to boost female undergraduates’ interest in computer science to the level of their male peers.”
  • Another way to promote female students’ sense of belonging in online math and science courses would be putting more women at the head of virtual classrooms.
  • All these approaches have in common a focus, not on teaching girls and women differently, but on helping them to feel differently about their place in the fields of math and science. Just as in the physical world, in the virtual sphere the barriers to girls’ and women’s advancement in STEM fields remain very much in place. With informed intervention and clever design, however, the digital walls may prove easier to scale.
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    This article is great for those at BSS, Branksome, Havergal, oh and any other school! I was on a panel with Brad Rathgeber, the Director of the OnLine School for Girls, and he was a great speaker on this front...
Marcie Lewis

Like Math? Thank Your Motivation, Not IQ: Scientific American - 1 views

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    Motivation is key to success learning mathematics.
Marcie Lewis

Born to Learn on Vimeo - 1 views

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    Great 5 min video about how we are born to learn.
alessandramatera

Building Students' Cognitive Flexibility | Edutopia - 0 views

  • Students need explicit instruction and opportunities to practice the flexible thinking that will make the most of their brains' fertile adolescent development stage.
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