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Alvaro Fernandez

Boost Your Attention With Meditation - 0 views

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    Brain training does not necessarily mean computerized games. Mediation is a great tool to train different parts of the brain.
Alvaro Fernandez

Walking increases brain volume and reduces risks of decline - 0 views

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    In the latest issue of Neurology a study by Erickson et al. (2010) suggests that walking regularly can increase brain volume and reduce the risks of developing.
andi chen

Amoeba Awareness in Facebook - 0 views

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    Recently a Facebook page created to boost awareness about the potential risk of the "brain-eating" microbes which being blamed for the brain infections that killed two youngsters recently.
Alvaro Fernandez

USA Hockey Bagged Gold at Brain Fitness Innovation Awards - 0 views

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    The brain fitness award has gone to USA hockey team for their continuous brain training and fitness. The hockey players developed perception and decision making skills with the help of its innovate cognitive training system designed by ACE and Bird Foundation. The game like training improved their performance and won more games than before. Congrats!!
Alvaro Fernandez

Scientific citique of BBC / Nature Brain Training Experiment - 0 views

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    A quick synopsis from the BBC show Bang Goes the Theory worked with the study authors to provide a test of the hypothesis that commercially available brain training programs transfer to general cognitive abilities.
D M

Your Brain At Work - 1 views

shared by D M on 13 May 09 - Cached
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    Ever wondered how your brain works and how you can learn better? May be helpful for teaching your students as well.
Elizabeth Koh

Languages smarten up your brain - Guardian Weekly - 7 views

  • a study of recent research into brain function reveals that students could be gaining a lot more from their pursuit of linguistic skills
  • It argues that there is a dovetailing of results between studies conducted over the last 40 years, including recent findings from the neurosciences
  • six areas in which the multilingual mind differs in some way to the monolingual mind
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  • enhanced capacity for learning whereby knowledge of languages can lead to superior memory function, especially short-term “working” memory
  • enhanced mental flexibility
  • Enhanced problem-solving capability
  • Greater understanding of how language functions and is used to achieve specific goals in life
  • slowdown of age-related mental diminishment
Alvaro Fernandez

Meet 10 Brain Fitness Innovation Awards Finalists - 0 views

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    Meet the top ten brian fitness innovation awards finalists from different associations. The winners will be announced during the state of Brain Fitness Innovation Webinar in May 2010
Alvaro Fernandez

What Impressed the Judging Panel on Innovation Award Winners and Finalists - 0 views

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    Here is what the Judging Panel and the SharpBrains team found most impressive from each Winner and Finalist of the 2010 Brain Fitness Innovation Awards, accompanied by some additional information on each of these 10 noteworthy initiatives and case studies.
Tutor Pace

Avail Instant, Affordable And Expert Homework Help 24x7 - Classified Ad - 0 views

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    Are you a student of Calculus? Got a task in calculus that is testing your brain? Stop worrying and tearing your hairs now. Solving calculus is not that difficult or nerve wracking, as you think, if you go for Calculus homework help.
sontimalonti

Revealed: new teaching methods that are producing dramatic results - Telegraph - 3 views

  • According to studies carried out at the National Institute for Child Health and Development in the United States, connections between developing brain cells form most effectively when the brain is given regular breaks, hence the spaces between lessons are every bit as crucial as the content of the lessons themselves;
  • the teacher gives a quickfire Powerpoint presentation, of about three slides a minute, and the pupils listen and read the screen, effectively taking in the information twice. After a gap, the same presentation is run, but there are missing spaces where the children have to fill in the missing words and repeat them aloud, which keeps their minds active and thinking. At this point they can also ask questions. After a second break, a similar presentation takes place.
  • Theoretically you could do half the year's syllabus in a couple of hours, leaving you with lots of time to do the exciting, practical stuff. But whether it would work for every single pupil in every single subject, I don't know
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  • In some ways, spaced learning is simply a modern twist on a very old-fashioned approach, that of rote learning.
  • Kids have higher expectations these days and they can multi-task and access new technology to a degree – and at a speed – that adults can only dream of, so if education is to remain relevant to them, we have to adapt, whether we like it or not.'
  • Over the past five years we've moved from an education system of very tightly regulated structure, curriculum and assessment to one where there's more freedom around the curriculum and much more freedom in the way schools organise themselves
  • In the classroom, pupils need continuity, not constant change and adoption of new fads. There's no substitute for an inspiring teacher passionate about their subject giving a well-planned lesson.'
  • Every child at the school has had some spaced learning lessons. The information that is compressed deals not only with key facts, but also with the fundamental principles of the subject, such as mathematical formulae, and gives examples of how to apply these. Some subjects, such as English, are harder to compress, but it can be done.
  • I find this new way of learning far more interesting than sitting with a textbook, and after every lesson I feel I've really learnt something, and I do remember it for a long time afterwards, too.'
  • Theoretically you could do half the year's syllabus in a couple of hours, leaving you with lots of time to do the exciting, practical stuff. But whether it would work for every single pupil in every single subject, I don't know,'
    • sontimalonti
       
      but surely this is crucial?
  • But the kids are on board and we're seeing the results. I suppose the thing that finally convinced me that we were on to something was when I sat in on one of our lessons and afterwards I discovered I knew chapter and verse on hormones – and had still retained the information months later.'
  • Rowena Coxon, a parent with two children at the school, Jenny, 16, and 14-year-old Elanor, admits that she had her doubts about spaced learning. 'I was sceptical at first, because it seemed to me that the students were spending a lot of time not actually learning, but what I found most striking was how much my daughters enjoyed it – far more than conventional cramming.
  • At Leasowes Community College in Dudley, outside Birmingham, the absolute antithesis of the eight-minute lesson is being hailed as the way forward. Here, classes can last up to five or six days. Students are immersed in a single subject, allowing them to complete practice, theory and coursework in a single block, and – so the theory goes – gain a deeper, more fundamental understanding of the topic. The corridors of this 1,200-roll school are papered with signs bearing stirring mottos such as success is a journey, not a destination, and Albert Camus's dictum you cannot create experience, you must undergo it.
  • 'We are combining the traditional with the innovative; we still teach languages, which is becoming increasingly rare, but we also recognise that part of our job is to prepare children to be successful in the world, so our aspirations are higher than getting them to pass a few exams. The sort of personal development we seek to promote doesn't fit into the culture of rigid one-hour lessons.'
    • sontimalonti
       
      as practised in waldorf schools for decades.
  • In the classroom, pupils need continuity, not constant change and adoption of new fads. There's no substitute for an inspiring teacher passionate about their subject giving a well-planned lesson.'
  • 'We have no bells here because they create a herd mentality. We want to foster personal responsibility; students can go to the loo when they want or fetch themselves a drink of water without asking permission. The teachers give them a break when they feel the kids need one.'
  • Traditionalists, brought up in the never-did-me-any-harm system of obedience – verging on obeisance – towards authority may find the modern vogue for individualism wholly at odds with their own school experience. Yet personal development has become the new clarion call across all areas of secondary education. Whether that can be achieved in tandem with outstanding exam results remains to be seen.
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    article on new teaching methods; new approach to learning - partnership with cambridge uni & microsoft education
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    most crucial aspect seems to me revisiting students and testing recall after a long period. Also, does this only apply to "fact learning", or does this also engage critical faculty?
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    The scientific method in education is concerned with giving the student breaks from lessons in order to help him focus more ..Greetings to all and happy to communicate with you. أطيب
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examsbook

General Knowledge Quiz with Answers - 0 views

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    Test your knowledge with a challenging Hard General Knowledge Quiz! Answer questions on various topics and see how well you fare. Get ready to push your brain to the limit!
henry_james

PortraitPro 2023 License Key Download [Latest] - 0 views

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    PortraitPro change your portraits with natural elements that convey proficient outcomes in minutes. This software is the best modifying programming utilizing man's brain power. It can improve any part of your representations for normally gorgeous outcomes.
Alvaro Fernandez

Can video games inspire altruism? - 0 views

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    A new study suggests that video games can be a force for good, finding that games with positive objectives can actually inspire people to perform acts of altruism.
Raymond Lai

White House announces $250M effort for science and math teachers - washingtonpost.com - 2 views

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    Yay! Stop the brain drain and put your money where your mouth is!
Alvaro Fernandez

Cognitive Training Identified as Protective Factor with Highest Evidence - 0 views

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    In recent NIH Alzeimer's cognitive decline prevention report, it has been observed that Cognitive training identified as protective factor, with highest evidence. Read more at sharpbrains.com
anonymous

'Summer Brain Drain' Robs Some Students of Skills Gained During School Year - washingto... - 0 views

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    This article relates to the school voucher article we read this week. It doesn't directly suggest the use of school vouchers but one of the main suggestions by opponets of vouchers was to create stimulating learning opportunities for those kids who come from less affluent backgrounds. This article also suggest the same thing. In subjects like math and reading all kids lose a bit of what they learn and especially in reading w/ the poorer children. This article mentions Fairchild's center which helps promote learning over the summer from all socioeconomic backgrounds.
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