welcome to the brain and pedagogy! presenters: paul sears

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Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

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Page 1: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy!

Presenters:Paul Sears

Page 2: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

Brain BasicsAdult brain weighs a little over 3 pounds,

made up of billions of nerve cells. About the size of a small grapefruit, shaped like a walnut

Controls our feelings, behavior, and thoughts

Collects and sorts information

Controls unbelievably complex functions

Masters spoken language

Stores memories of a lifetime

Page 3: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

A stop at the PARKING LOT

Page 4: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

Brain Alert #1: THE LEARNING ENVIRONMENT

What are positive things for the brain in the learning environment?

Page 5: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

Frontal – planning and thinking, rational and executive control center of the brain – higher order thinking, problem solving, regulates emotions

Temporal – sound, music, face/object recognition, some long-term memory

Occipital – visual processing

Parietal – spatial, calculation, other types of recognitions

Page 6: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

Brain Boosters

Water – delivers nutrients to the brain, eliminates toxins. Hydration = brain function and alertness

*Drink 1.5 to 2 liters of water/day!

Oxygen - Brain cells consume oxygen and glucose for fuel. The more challenging task, the more fuel needed. Low amount of oxygen = less alert.

*Exercise to oxygenate blood!

Glucose – The form of sugar found in the blood from food. Fruit is excellent source. Eat moderate portions.

Sleep – Brain needs sleep for reviewing/storing information. Vital to memory formation.

Page 7: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

Brain Busters• Nicotine – Absorbed by the lungs, enters into the

bloodstream and circulates throughout the brain. Can impede heart rate, breathing, memory, and learning

Caffeine – Coffee, soda, chocolate as examples. Acts as stimulant and dependency can develop. Causes fatigue and headaches.

Stress – A small amount can encourage increased performance. Prolonged stress can damage brain cells and impede memory storage and recall.

All Things In Moderation!

Page 8: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

InteractionBrain constantly looking for stimuli

The brain is a “social brain” – pleasure derived from interacting with other brains

Provides a framework for support – not alone

Engages the senses

Page 9: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

The Brain Loves Novelty!

-Constantly looking for stimulus in the environment

-Unexpected stimulus causes a rush of adrenalin

-The brain focuses attention on stimulus

-Examples:--Humor--Movement--Props--Music

Page 10: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

Brain Alert #1: THE LEARNING ENVIRONMENT

What are positive things for the brain in the learning environment?

What should I do in my classroom to promote these things?

Page 11: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

Where does new information come from?

The External Environment

Page 12: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

How does new information get into the brain?

Page 13: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

Does it all get processed?

Page 14: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

Let’s watch some basketball!

Task

Monitor the basketball players in white and count the number of times that they pass the basketball.

You will be asked to state the number of passes you observed at the end of the video.

Page 15: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

What happens to things that don’t get through the

filter?

OUT is OUT!!!!!

Page 16: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

Brain Alert #2: KNOW THY STUDENTS

How does the brain decide what is important?

Page 17: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

What’s Next?

Page 18: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

The Hierarchy of the Brain

S

E

X

S U R V I V A L

E M O T I O N

X T R A N E O U S

Page 19: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

Movie Time!

A Boy

A Bomb &

A Bus

Page 20: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

Value Line Time!

Page 21: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

1. 2.

3. 4.

5. 6.

Page 22: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

Brain Alert #2: KNOW THY STUDENTSHow does the brain decide what is important?

What should I do in my classroom to promote these things?

Page 23: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

Brain Alert #3: PLANNINGHow can effective planning impact student

learning ?

Page 24: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

SEX

Page 25: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

Working Memory – Where thinking happens!

SEX

Page 26: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

The capacity of working memory has limits.

Page 27: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

The Importance of CHUNKING

Providing the right amount of material in the right way for the learner

Often taking individual units of information and associating them into larger units

Let’s try an example:

Page 28: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

Ready, Get Set, Remember!

CBSJFKFBILOLUSA

Page 29: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

Try Again

CBS JFK FBI LOL USA

Page 31: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

Working memory also has limits of time

Page 32: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

The Primacy-Recency Effect

Remember best that which comes first

Remember second best that which comes last

Page 33: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

Retention During a 40 Minute Learning Episode

Deg

ree o

f R

ete

nti

on

0 10 20 30 40

minutes

Page 34: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

Retention During a 20 Minute Learning Episode

0 5 10 15 20

minutes

Deg

ree o

f R

ete

nti

on

Page 35: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

Write down the names of the

Seven Dwarfs.

Page 36: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

THE SEVEN DWARFS

Sleepy

Happy

Grouchy

Fancy

Dopey

Sleazy

Sweetie

Bashful

Grumpy

Sneezy

Mopey

Doc

Page 37: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

THE SEVEN DWARFS

Sleepy

Happy

Grouchy

Fancy

Dopey

Sleazy

Sweetie

Bashful

Grumpy

Sneezy

Mopey

Doc

Page 38: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

Recognition vs. Recall

How much do our students need to memorize vs. recognize?

We need to reflect this in our teaching and then test in the same manner that we teach.

Page 39: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

Brain Alert #3: PLANNINGHow can effective planning impact student

learning ?

What should I do in my classroom to promote these things?

Page 41: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

Brain Alert #4: DELIVERY OF INSTRUCTION

How will brain friendly instruction help ensure that

“in is in”

Page 42: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

SEX

Page 43: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

What is required for information to move into

long-term memory?

SEX

Page 44: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

Sense &

Meaning

Page 45: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

Average Retention Rate After 24 HoursLEARNING PYRAMID

Page 46: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

The Goopation of Garpon

To survive in this world, everyone must be familiar with garpon. In order to use garpon successfully, it must be goopated often. Goopation begins with oxporation. Oxporation can only take place once every proquar. To oxporate, you must mix zorzine with cafon and stir gently. When the oxporation is complete, add garpon and the mixture will spontaneously goopate. Goopation can take from 12 to 14 spomanes. You will know the garpon is goopated when it fuzzles. Adapted from The Montillation of Taxoline by Pat

Wolfe (1996)

Page 47: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

Forgetting

Losing pathways to the sites

Page 48: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

Brain Cells

Brain composed of two types of cells – nerve & glial

Nerve cells – called “Neurons”, about 100 billion

Glial cells – (Greek for glue) hold the Neurons together, keep harmful substances out of neurons and support them

Page 49: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

Dendrites – tens of thousands of “branches” from core. Receive electrical impulses from other neurons

Axon – transmits electrical impulses from neurons

Page 50: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

“Synapse”

Neurons do not directly connect with one another.

Electrical impulses travel through axon to synapse. Synapse is where chemicals, “neurotransmitters,” are released and draw in neighboring neuron.

When a set of neurons continuously “fire” together, repeatedly, firings become easier and automatic – memories are then formed

**Synapse simulation / imagery

Page 51: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

SEX

Page 52: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

Long-Term Storage

There is a 70-90 % loss of new learning within 18-24 hours.If it can be recalled after this time, it is probably destined for long-term storage.

Adequate time is needed for encoding and consolidation of new information into storage networks (file folders). Sleep is crucial in this process.

Page 53: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

The Cognitive Belief System

“How we see the world”

The CBS is the sum total and combination of all that is in long-term storage.

No two people perceive the world in the exact same way.

Individual experiences result in different interpretations.

Page 54: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

Self-Concept“The Way We See Ourselves

In The World”

Self-concept is shaped by past experiences – both positive & negative.

The addition of new positive and negative experiences alters self-concept.

Page 55: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

Implications of Self-Concept

If prior encounters with information were successful…

then information is likely to pass along to Working Memory

If past experiences were unsuccessful…..

then “The blinds are closed”

Page 56: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

SEX

Page 57: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

Brain Alert #4: DELIVERY OF INSTRUCTIONHow will brain friendly instruction help ensure that

“in is in”

What should I do in my classroom to promote these things?

Page 58: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

Brain Alert #5: ASSESSMENTHow does ongoing assessment help me see if

“in is in”?

Page 60: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

*Different forms of assessment*

Formative

Summative

Periodic

Unannounced

Page 61: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

This is..

Page 62: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

Brain Alert #5: ASSESSMENTHow does ongoing assessment help me see if

“in is in”?

What should I do in my classroom to promote these things?

Page 63: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

A stop at the PARKING LOT

Page 64: Welcome to the Brain and Pedagogy! Presenters: Paul Sears

Thoughts/Comments on the Model?

SEX