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Brains and Learning

Brains and Learning. Implications for Teachers. The Human Brain. The human brain is grayish white and about the size a grapefruit. Roughly 78% of the human brain is water. About 10% is fat. Protein makes up most of the rest of the brain. What Holds Our Attention?. Novelty and variety

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Brains and Learning

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  1. Brains and Learning Implications for Teachers

  2. The Human Brain • The human brain is grayish white and about the size a grapefruit. • Roughly 78% of the human brain is water. • About 10% is fat. • Protein makes up most of the rest of the brain.

  3. What HoldsOur Attention? • Novelty and variety • Engagement—emotionally, physically, and verbally • Options for choice • Relevance—personal, in context • Immediate feedback

  4. The Human Brain • The human brain takes in more information from the environment in one day than a powerful computer does in a year. • Information in and of itself is not worth learning. The brain must build connections to what it already knows in order for information to matter. • The brain dumps most information.

  5. The Human Brain • The more senses a person uses when learning the more the brain remembers. Which of the five senses most quickly evokes memory? Smell

  6. Remembering what we Learn • In order to create new meaning, humans need internal time to allow new learning to imprint on the brain. • Unless new learning is imprinted on the brain, it is lost. • When students move from subject to subject, information learned in the previous subject is lost unless it has been imprinted.

  7. The Human Brain • When bored, the brain turns inward for novel sensations. • 90% of all dropouts have passing grades. They leave school because of boredom.

  8. Surprise! Boys and Girls are Different. • Over the past twenty years, research about how the human brain learns has exploded. • Boys and girls learn in very different ways. • Schools are geared toward how girls learn. “Very well meaning people have created a biologically disrespectful model of education.” Dr. Bruce Perry, MD (neurologist)

  9. Boys… • Get 70% of all Ds and Fs • Make up 80% of discipline problems • Make up 70% of learning disabilities • Make up 80% of those on Ritalin • Are 1 to 1.5 years behind girls in reading and writing • Make up 80% of dropouts

  10. The Trouble with BoysJanuary 30, 2006 Thirty years ago men represented 58% of the undergraduate student body. Now they’re a minority of 44%. “This widening gap,” says Margaret Spellings, U.S. Sec. of Education, “has profound implications for the economy, society, families and democracy.”

  11. How Brains Learn • Because of advances in medical technology, information about how the brain works has dramatically increased. • Though debated for centuries, scientists have conclusive evidence that boys and girls process information differently.

  12. The Minds of Girls • Girls… • By adolescence, a girl’s corpus callosum is 25% larger than a boy’s. This allows more “cross talk” between the right and left hemispheres of the brain. • Thus, girls are able to multitask better than boys. • They have fewer attention span problems. • They can make faster transitions between lessons.

  13. The Minds of Girls • Girls have stronger neural connections that are in sync with how school is structured: • Better listening skills • More detailed memory storage • Better discrimination among the tones of voice.

  14. The Minds of Girls • A girl’s prefrontal cortex develops earlier and is larger than a boy’s. • Because girls have more serotonin, they make fewer impulsive decisions. • A girl’s brain experiences 15% more blood flow in the center of the brain.

  15. The Minds of Girls • More cortical areas devoted to verbal functioning give girls an advantage in school because girls are better at… • Verbal functioning • Sitting still • Listening • Tonality • The complexities of reading and writing

  16. The Trouble with Boys In the PBS Series “Raising Cain” Dr. Michael Thompson commented, [In school] “girl behavior becomes the gold standard. Boys are treated like defective girls.”

  17. The Minds of Boys • Boys have more coritcal area devoted to spatial-mechanical functioning and half as much to verbal-emotive functioning. • Spatial-mechanical functioning makes boys want to move objects through the air—balls, airplanes, little sisters, or just their arms and legs.

  18. The Minds of Boys • Boys have less serotonin and less oxytocin. This makes them more impulsive and less likely to sit still to talk to someone. • The more words a teacher uses, the greater the chance that boys will zone out.

  19. The Minds of Boys • Boys’ brains are better suited to symbols, abstractions, and pictures. • Consequently, boys generally learn higher math and physics better than girls. • Boys prefer video games for the physical movement and the destruction.

  20. The Minds of Boys • Boys have less blood flow to the brain and tend to structure or compartmentalize learning. • This is one reason why boys like to use graphic organizers; they contain compartments. • Consider a man’s wallet versus a woman’s purse.

  21. The Minds of Boys • In school boys get into more trouble for… • Not listening • Fidgeting • Sleeping in class • Incomplete assignments.

  22. Advanced Placement TestsComparing Boys and Girls

  23. The Big Question • Based on the behaviors we expect of students in schools and on the differences in how girls’ and boys’ brains function, how then do boys fare in school?

  24. What do you think? Should we keep trying to change boys or should we change how schools operate?

  25. Success for All Students • With all of this new information about brain functioning, we can no longer ignore the needs of boys. • It is time to teach in ways that meet the needs of both boys and girls.

  26. Two-Part Goal for Teachers • Promote the expression and development of a child’s natural ability. • Help students compensate for areas of inherent disadvantage or fragility.

  27. Enhancing Teaching for Girls • Use lots of puzzles to foster perceptual and symbolic learning. • Promote leadership by using working groups and teams. • Verbally encourage quieter girls.

  28. Enhancing Teaching for Girls • Play physical games to promote gross motor skills. • Take digital pictures of girls being successful at math and science tasks. • Use manipulatives in science and math.

  29. Enhancing Teaching for Boys • Use manipulatives that require boys to use fine motor skills. • Surround the room with books so boys get used to their omnipresence. • Make lessons experiential and kinesthetic—use technology.

  30. Enhancing Teaching for Boys • Use physical lessons so boys can work in a larger space. • Keep verbal instructions to no more than one minute. • Don’t layer instructions one on another unless you put them in a numbered list. • Use male mentors and role models.

  31. The Trouble with Boys • One of the most reliable predictors of whether a boy will succeed or fail in high school rests on a single question: Does the boy have a man in his life to look up to? • Boys must have at least one positive male role model.

  32. Enhancing Teaching for Boys • 1 in 9 elementary teachers is male. • Boys have almost no role models showing how to succeed in school except coaches, which only promotes sports. • 80% of girls in Harlem talked about being doctors or lawyers some day; 80% of boys talked of being NBA stars. • America leads the world in fatherlessness.

  33. Restructuring Expectations • Teachers should expect, at times, healthy physicality and aggression among boys. • Create lots of opportunities for boys to get up and move around. • Use brain breaks to revive boys during and after rest states.

  34. Restructuring Classroom Practices • Use visual dictionaries and play word games, especially on the computer. • Regularly take boys to the library and introduce them to male role model readers and authors. • Link screen time with study rewards.

  35. Restructuring Classroom Practices • One reason boys lag behind girls in reading and writing is because teachers do not allow boys to read and write in a fantasy realm about what is important to them—aggression, violence, and death.

  36. Restructuring Classroom Practices • Teachers need to provide reading material that boys enjoy: • Texts filled with spatial-kinetic action—sports, science fiction, thrillers and books filled with suspense • Graphic and visual in nature—graphic novels and comics • Technical and mechanical books and articles—car, aerospace, skateboard magazines.

  37. Questions?

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