Comments (23)

Comment RSS
Math Specialist

New to Blog

Was this helpful?
0

I am new to Blog Discussions but I am going to give it a try. I have always been interested in how the brain works and how it affects the way we learn. I have only been to one training that discussed how this topic relates to learning. However after that one training, I did change several ways I taught but I want to learn so much more.

First grade teacher, Maryland

Wholeheartedly agree!!

Was this helpful?
0

Thank you for an insightful article about how important it is for teachers to gain a better understanding of the brain! Considering that as teachers, we are charged with filling this organ with knowledge, it just makes sense that we should understand how best to do that. I am sure that slowly research findings will be added to good teaching practices, but there is so much information out there that we could be putting to use now!

Hello, I am the sole teacher

Was this helpful?
0

Hello, I am the sole teacher of a small one-room school room school for kids who are falling through the cracks in a small Missouri town. Just one hour after reading this blog, I interviewed a young boy, who fit right into what you were speaking of. I have had quite a bit of training through this when we were foster parents and dealing with many issues. I whole heartily agree that teachers should have a course about the brain. Having adopted two autistic children, we went through every training available to look for antecedents for their behaviors. I have taken all this training and implemented it into the classroom which has given positive results. Thank you so much for this article. I enjoyed it thoroughly.

5th grade science, math, and social studies teacher from Hickory, MS

Susanne, I am new to this

Was this helpful?
0

Susanne, I am new to this blog and learning the ropes. I responded to your question with some suggestions that I hope you will find meaningful. However, it posted to the top of the blog page. Sorry, :)

5th grade science, math, and social studies teacher from Hickory, MS

Perhaps you could talk about

Was this helpful?
0

Perhaps you could talk about the brain on a very basic level. Your upper elem. grades may have a model. Discuss and touch the front part of the brain and tell them that this is where the 'good learning' takes place. Talk about how important it is to pay attention with their eyes by looking at you, pay attention with their bodies by turning their bodies to follow you when you move around the room. When the children are totally engaged in a particular activity, tell them there is a lot of front brain learning going on and praise them for it. When they are disengaged and not paying attention, tell them...Uh, oh! I see a lot of back brain learning going on. By the end of the year, they will know exactly what you mean by front brain and back brain learning!

5th grade science, math, and social studies teacher from Hickory, MS

Wonderful article! The

Was this helpful?
0

Wonderful article! The information given here supplies scientific evidence to something that teachers have long known. If children enjoy a subject and feel comfortable in their environment real learning can take place. When this happens, you can just 'see' their engagement in the lesson. They lean forward and follow you with their eyes. You just know their 'front brain is involved. If a student is mad at you, frustrated, or bored, they lean back and look elsewhere. If any brain activity is going on, you can tell it is on the 'back burner'. Thank you so much for giving me another reason to go the extra mile and engage that more permanent front brain.

Brain lesson

Was this helpful?
0

I love this brain lesson on the first day. I will definitely be brushing up on my information so I can do something like this with my students! Thanks!

This is definitely needed!

Was this helpful?
0

I agree that learning about the brain is needed in teacher prep classes, and even in professional development for classroom teachers. Most teachers teach students hoping that they are perfect, not realizing that the lessons may be affecting the way children act and receive information. I am a teacher who uses whole-brain teaching in my classroom, and I still feel uneasy explaining the strategy to my colleagues since I do not exactly know how certain things affect the brain. I will definitely begin to look into more brain based articles to strengthen my knowledge about the brain!

First year teacher attaining my masters degree

While in my undergrad

Was this helpful?
+1

While in my undergrad classes, one of our required couses was titled "Brain Based Learning." It was probabaly my fovorite class I took as an undergraduate. I comepletely agree that teachers should be aware of how the brain works if they are to be entrusted to instill knowldge into students brains. Knowing how the brain works will give teachers an advantage to ensure that the knowldge they deliver to their students will be remembered and useful, and not just forgotten once the bell rings for lunch time.

EFL & ESOL Teacher

Your blog brings to my mind

Was this helpful?
+1

Your blog brings to my mind the number of times I have seen the advertisements for a Master of Neuroscience in Education in many teachers' magazines. It isn't just a fascinating topic to read about, but a relevant area to consider seriously if we want to improve our practice and reach all the different learners we have in our classroom. I've had some close experience with area because of a professional development I had some years ago in my school back then, in my country of origin. It was by a founder of a very important and successful school. He started a school, with a new pedagogy in mind, around 20 years ago. He began working with high IQ students and later on, opened the doors to any student and parent interested in the system, as a proof that their new, alternative pedagogy works. The school has strong methodologies to favor thinking skills, autonomy, creativity and love for learning. Teachers work beyond the cognitive area. During the professional development, I noticed how much he knew about how children learn, the process in the brain, its relation to student's age, and how much a teacher can offer the student, through his/her practice, to bring the best of the student potential. For many years, that school has been in the highest rank of my country. The school is placed according to scores students get in the national achievement test they take in the last year of high school. Just with the aspects adopted in my school, I was able to see meaningful changes besides students’ performance and learning. Teachers were more innovative, creative and critical about their planning, their instruction and assessment. Class books were used more like another learning tool, than a script. I hope the school district I'm at now offers a professional development in neuroscience, or one that emphasizes in how children learn, and how we can bring and integrate that knowledge to our practice. It's a way of reaching all students and favoring their learning. It would be a way to close the achievement gap that is a huge concern for many of us.

see more see less