working with teen parents linking life & learning findings from the neuroscience of emotion

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Working with teen parents Linking Life & Learning findings from the neuroscience of emotion

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Page 1: Working with teen parents Linking Life & Learning findings from the neuroscience of emotion

Working with teen parents

Linking Life & Learning

findings from the neuroscience of emotion

Page 2: Working with teen parents Linking Life & Learning findings from the neuroscience of emotion

This workshop (and my current research) is about taking the findings from the Neuroscience of Emotion and linking them to a specialised educational environment - a teen parent unit –

It’s about converting those findings into a set of practical conditions and strategies that optimise neural development – for teen parent and child

Page 3: Working with teen parents Linking Life & Learning findings from the neuroscience of emotion

Shae’s story As I read Shea’s story please reflect on her

experience of life and learning …

… reading between the lines…

What does she tell us about her life?

What does she tell us about her learning experiences – negative and positive?

What else does she tell us?

Page 4: Working with teen parents Linking Life & Learning findings from the neuroscience of emotion

Some thoughts….

Page 5: Working with teen parents Linking Life & Learning findings from the neuroscience of emotion

Learners are turned away from learning for many reasons: poor health, nutrition and sleep

deprivation emotional factors such as

experiences of shame and humiliation and fear

Learners arrive in class with an unconscious self-image and attachment blueprints that they then project on to a teacher.

Page 6: Working with teen parents Linking Life & Learning findings from the neuroscience of emotion

In a teen parent environment we have the two most critical periods of neural development going on in one context –

the infant brain and the adolescent brain

Page 7: Working with teen parents Linking Life & Learning findings from the neuroscience of emotion

infant brain

250,000 new neurons are developed each hour, through sensory and emotional data scanned from the environment.

Relationships – attachment – the single most important factor in brain development during the first year of life

Page 8: Working with teen parents Linking Life & Learning findings from the neuroscience of emotion

neural pathways formed through attachment enable emotional regulation.

Dysfunctional, or inconsistent attachment activates chemical and neurological changes through the mirror neuron system resulting in physiological distress and even atrophy of critical brain areas.

The un-wellness of a primary carer has a negative effect on the well-being of the child.

Page 9: Working with teen parents Linking Life & Learning findings from the neuroscience of emotion

Mirror neurons….

Page 10: Working with teen parents Linking Life & Learning findings from the neuroscience of emotion

Healthy early relationships allow optimum forming of neural networks that enable: higher self-esteem emotional regulation decision making feelings of wellbeing and security they support all levels of social,emotional and cognitive development.

Page 11: Working with teen parents Linking Life & Learning findings from the neuroscience of emotion

Neural pathways

Page 12: Working with teen parents Linking Life & Learning findings from the neuroscience of emotion

https://www.humanbrainproject.eu/

Page 13: Working with teen parents Linking Life & Learning findings from the neuroscience of emotion

https://www.humanbrainproject.eu/

Page 14: Working with teen parents Linking Life & Learning findings from the neuroscience of emotion

Adolescent brain a critical time for the development of

the cortex… rising hormone levels, intense emotions,

violent mood swings and feelings of isolation that can lead to depression.

emotion drives attention, learning and memory…

evolutionary brain development expects mating to occur in early teenage years – out of sync with social expectations.

Page 15: Working with teen parents Linking Life & Learning findings from the neuroscience of emotion

Feelings of danger trigger cortisol, the stress response hormone, it activates defensive response; ‘fight, freeze or flight’.

These stress responses do not distinguish

between emotional or physical danger

The stress system responds by releasing clotting elements into the blood, elevating cholesterol levels, depressing the immune system, tensing large muscles, increasing the blood pressure—and much more.” (Sylwester, 1994)

Page 16: Working with teen parents Linking Life & Learning findings from the neuroscience of emotion

High levels of cortisol caused by stress can bring about despair, and chronically high levels can ultimately destroy hippocampal neurons associated with learning and memory (Vincent, 1990; Davidson R. J., 2000).

Page 17: Working with teen parents Linking Life & Learning findings from the neuroscience of emotion

Effects of trauma, abuse and neglect on the developing brain

This scan shows decreased metabolic activity / function in the temporal lobes of an abused child.

Page 18: Working with teen parents Linking Life & Learning findings from the neuroscience of emotion

In both infant and adolescent…Emotions are generated from context: internal sensations from the body external sensations from the world

Relationships – face to face interaction - are of critical importance to both infant & adolescent brain development

Environment – conditions and states

Page 19: Working with teen parents Linking Life & Learning findings from the neuroscience of emotion

So what do our young people need….

those other molecules, the endorphins…

Page 20: Working with teen parents Linking Life & Learning findings from the neuroscience of emotion

Neuroplasticity… Neuroplasticity is the ability of the brain to

change, to restructure, to rebuild

One of the most effective mechanisms to activate change in the brain is secure attachment

How do we create conditions in a classroom setting that can enable secure attachment?

Page 21: Working with teen parents Linking Life & Learning findings from the neuroscience of emotion

Conditions for neuroplasticity in classrooms

“Invisible Classroom”(Kirke Olson)

“Tribal Classroom” (Louis Cozolino)

Page 22: Working with teen parents Linking Life & Learning findings from the neuroscience of emotion

Invisible classroom implicit curriculum – materiality attachment based relationships culture

Underlying principles: safety and security, emotional wellbeing, trust, recognition and acceptanceLink to tātaiako concepts of Ako, Tangata Whenuatanga

Page 23: Working with teen parents Linking Life & Learning findings from the neuroscience of emotion

Tribal classroom Primitive social instincts linked to survival Fostering bonding , attachment, group cohesion Democratic leadership

Underlying principles: Connection & belonging Security Shared values & responsibilities Link to Tātaiako concepts, Whanaungatanga,

Manaakitanga

Page 24: Working with teen parents Linking Life & Learning findings from the neuroscience of emotion

Linking Tribal & Invisible classroom principlesSafety -physical & emotional

The neural circuitry that assesses the environment for danger also serves as the infrastructure of attachment. Physical safety, attachment security, and learning are interdependent processes.

Plasticity is maximised and students learn best when they feel physically safe.

Page 25: Working with teen parents Linking Life & Learning findings from the neuroscience of emotion

Additionally…. Joyfulness - 3 things that light up the

brain for learning: Physical Exercise, Laughter, Singing

Emotional regulation – ability to articulate and acknowledge feelings

Page 26: Working with teen parents Linking Life & Learning findings from the neuroscience of emotion

• Secure attachment • Safe, stimulating, joyful environment• stable and well regulated emotions = conditions for learning

in infants and in adolescents, the essential conditions for learning are the same…

Page 27: Working with teen parents Linking Life & Learning findings from the neuroscience of emotion

The goal of attachment-based teaching is to have each infant, child, adolescent move from feeling vulnerable, frightened, and unimportant to feeling protected, cared for and valued - The state of mind that optimizes learning.

- Louis Colozino (2013)

Page 28: Working with teen parents Linking Life & Learning findings from the neuroscience of emotion

Principles of Connectivism

Learning and knowledge rests in diversity of opinions.Learning combines cognitive and emotional processesLearning is a process of connecting specialized nodes or information sources.Learning may reside in non-human appliances.Capacity to know more is more critical than what is currently knownNurturing and maintaining connections is needed to facilitate continual learning.Ability to see connections between fields, ideas, and concepts is a core skill.Currency (accurate, up-to-date knowledge) is the intent of all connectivist learning activities.Decision-making is itself a learning process. Choosing what to learn and the meaning of incoming information is seen through the lens of a shifting reality. While there is a right answer now, it may be wrong tomorrow due to alterations in the information climate affecting the decision.