Leslie Owen Wilson 2007, restrictions on usage
| Using Brain-based education to optimize learning - some helpful hints |
Copyright Leslie O. Wilson 1993, revised 2005
If we get too comfortable, we stop growing. Herb Thelen
1. CLIMATE -
If you want
your students to think, make the learning environment and instructional
processes SAFE! The neocortex is the largest portion of the human brain,
while some thinking occurs in the limbic region, the majority of complex
thought, and memory storage occurs in the neocortex. Through scientific
testing we now know that the neocortex doesn't function properly when
humans are stressed or afraid. Create a classroom environment that is
safe - one where it is safe to make mistakes and take academic risks.
2. STRESS REDUCTION
- Stress
is also an enemy of efficient thinking. Make sure students know how to
reduce stress - teach stress reduction and relaxation exercises.
3. METACOGNITION -
Allow
students opportunities to examine their own metacognitive structures. In
other words, create a classroom where students are allowed to think and
explore their own thinking and learning patterns, - how they think and
learn best. Teach them about the brain and its functions and about
different study skills and retention methods. Allow students the
opportunities to develop and create their own learning and study
techniques.
4. ENVIRONMENTS
- Allow students the opportunity to optimize their learning by creating
different learning environments for different types of activities. Learn
to use different types of lighting, music, or aromas, or silence to
create different or enriched learning environments. Music can stimulate
or relax listeners and can induce compatible brain wave patterns that
enhance learning and retention. The effects of aromas on learning
responses are just being investigated and documented. Learn how these
environmental elements can aid learning.
5. CHUNKING
INFORMATION
- Learn to pace and chunk material so that it fits the cognitive
structure of your audience. The average retention chunk that can be held
by the human brain is seven bites of information. This can vary from
human to human by + or - two, 5-9 bites. Organize material being
presented so that students have opportunities to encode information in
different ways and channel it into the long-term memory.
6. INDIVIDUAL
DIFFERENCES -
Be willing to make
allowances for individual differences. Learn about learning
disabilities, modalities, learning styles, and multiple intelligences.
Use a variety of techniques based on these concepts and create
instructional bridges from one intelligence into another or from one
learning style into another. And be sure to provide instructional
delivery so that it meets different learner modalities - auditory,
visual, and kinesthetic/tactile. Try to vary and combine these so that
you are using all three methods frequently.
7. ACCESSING PRIOR KNOWLEDGE - Whenever possible, make what you teach relevant to the lives of your students. Show them how they can use the information or skills you are teaching. We learn and retain material, processes, and information that we perceive as useful, relevant, or of personal worth.
8. RIGHT & LEFT
HEMISPHERE ACTIVITIES -
Use activities that
use both hemispheres of the brain. Vary thought processes so that you
are using both convergent and divergent thought processes, the rational
and linear, combined with intuitive and creative thought processes.
9. VARYING EXPERIENCES - Provide experiences that require reflection, experiential learning, and concrete experience and/or application. Create bridges to abstract thought using common experiences, experiential learning, personal reflection, metaphors, similes and analogies. Even when cognitively capable of abstract thought, processes, or connections many learners must have concrete or experiential entry into abstractions in order not to become frustrated. (This is true for many adult learners as well.) Have students practice techniques where they explain things to others using metaphors, similes and analogies, or where they seek common connections through personal experiences. This helps to facilitate communication skills as well as creating bridges for understanding.
10. GROUP
WORK MINIMIZES RISK - At individual levels, competition
frequently kills originality and creativity - foster risk-taking
behaviors when you want students to come up with original answers and
products. Make it safe to fail, revise and try again. Please remember
that competition at group levels is much less threatening.
11. DOWN TIME -
Be
willing to give students appropriate time in which to be creative and
reflective. Creative thought cannot be turned on and off like a switch.
It requires time to dream about and develop ideas. Be willing to give
students the gift of time.
12. MOVEMENT MAKES
THE ABSTRACT CONCRETE -
Allow students
opportunities to physically encode information. This means having
students move, talk, walk, handle, sing, rhyme, dance, tap out, write,
dramatize and so forth, so that they are creating many different
pathways to their memories.
13. PAIR-SHARE
PATTERN-MAKING -
Allow students
opportunities to construct and discover patterns by themselves. Give
them opportunities to share discovered patterns with others.
14. REFLECTION -
Provide
an environment where students find it safe enough to make mistakes. Some
of life's most valuable lessons come making and attempting to rectify
mistakes. Encourage students to reflect on their mistakes and learn from
them.
15. TEACHING &
LEARNING STYLES -
Vary your teaching
techniques - mixing and combining cognitive, affective and physical
activities and learning modalities - (auditory, visual and kinesthetic (haptic,
digital, tactile) and multimodal preferences).
16. MEMORY-
ENHANCING ACTIVITIES -
If you want
students to remember something, make it memorable. (music, movement,
drama, costumes, hats, art work, mind maps )
17. RETENTION
INCREASES THROUGH USE -
Retention is
increased when there are opportunities for students to rehearse learned
material, through active discussion, and by teaching and/or tutoring
others.