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Blooming the Standards Part I: How the brain works and its impact on education and learning

Blooming the Standards

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Blooming the Standards. Part I: How the brain works and its impact on education and learning. Cognitive Wheel. Access prior knowledge: identify level of Bloom’s Taxonomy of given instructions in a hands-on sort activity. Working in groups Discussing, communicating Making evaluations. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Blooming the Standards

Blooming the Standards

Part I: How the brain works and its impact on education and learning

Page 2: Blooming the Standards

Cognitive Wheel

Access prior knowledge: identify level of Bloom’s Taxonomy of given instructions in a hands-on sort activity.

Working in groups Discussing, communicating Making evaluations

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GAME Plan Goal - Participants will learn about how the

brain functions and how that knowledge can be used to develop student HOTS.

Activities – Memory Song

Baggage Claim

Partner Share Measure – Memory Map Evaluation – Plus/deltas

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The Brain Stem

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The Limbic System

Cerebellum

Hippocampus

Amygdala

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Amygdala

• Gatekeeper

• Three levels of attention

• The need to BELONG

• The need to be SAFE

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The Hippocampus

• Transferring memories

• Making new memories

• Inhibition

• Smell

• Location

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The Cerebellum

• Movement

• Balance

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“It's like a math co-processor. It's not essential for any activity ... but it makes any activity better. Anything we can think of as higher thought, mathematics, music, philosophy, decision-making, social skill, draws upon the cerebellum....” Dr. Jay Giedd, National Institute of Mental Health

The Cerebellum

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Frontallobe

Temporallobe

Parietal lobe

Occipitallobe

Cerebellum

The Cerebrum

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The Frontal Lobe

• How we interact with our surroundings. • Our judgments on daily routines. • Our expressive language. • Assigns meaning to words we choose. • Involves word association. • Memory for habits and motor activities

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The Parietal Lobe

• Location for visual attention. • Location for touch perception. • Goal directed voluntary movements. • Manipulation of objects. • Integration of different senses that allows for

understanding a single concept.

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The Occipital Lobe

Vision

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The Temporal Lobe

• Hearing • Memory • Visual perceptions. • Categorizing of objects. T

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Memory SongSung to the tune of “10 Little Indians”

Touch the appropriate area of your brain as you sing:

Sing:Temporal, Occipital, ParietalTemporal, Occipital, ParietalTemporal, Occipital, ParietalFrontal, Cerebellum

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Check for Understanding:Which lobe(s) would students mainly use when: Sorting colors into primary, secondary, tertiary Playing spelling Twister Typing vocabulary words Copying notes from the board Listening to teacher lecture Role playing an event from history Completing a word find Discussing the pros and cons of a proposal

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Higher Level Thinking

Can actually generate NEW neurons (neurogenesis)

Adds dendrites Increases the thickness of the myelin

sheath

Using the Gray Matter!

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Stimulating Environment Affects Learning

A child's ability to learn can increase or decrease by 25 percent or more, depending on whether he or she grows up in a stimulating environment.

www.brainconnection.com

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Two times of ENORMOUS brain growth and pruning:

During the first month of life, the number of connections or synapses increases from 50 trillion to 1 quadrillion.

If an infant's body grew at a comparable rate, his weight would increase from 8.5 pounds at birth to 170 pounds at one month old.

Overproduction ends, pruning begins until about age 3

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Second cycle of growth and pruning Dendritic growth spurt at age 11 in girls, 12

in boys Pruning phase during adolescence Age 13 – 18 lose 1% of gray matter per

year If you don’t use it, you lose it!

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The Teacher Effect Quality of classroom instruction is most

significant factor in students’ brain development.

Didactic instruction – teacher directed Interactive instruction – student actively

engaged

Which type do you think grows dendrites?

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Sad Fact:

Failing to engage students actively can actually make students dumber.

Use it or lose it: If dendrites are not being used, they will be pruned.

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Automaticity: Key to Higher Levels

As pattern of neural stimulation develops by use, less electrochemical activity is needed in order to accomplish a task.

More electrochemical activity is devoted to frontal cortex in a more efficient way.

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Newborns Distinguish Speech

Children as young as four days old can distinguish the vowel sounds of the language in their natural environment from those of a foreign language.

www.brainconnection.com

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Pretty Weird

Aoccdrnig to rscheearch at Cmabrigde Uinervtisy, it deosn”t mttaer in what oredr the ltteers in a wrd are, the olny iprmoetnt tihng is that the frist and lsat ltteer be at the rghit pclae. The rset can be a tatol mses and you can still raed it wouthit porbelm. This is bcuseae the huamn mnid deos not raed ervey lteter by istlef, but the word as a wlohe. Amzanig huh?

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Baggage Claim

On an index card, write a word or phrase OR draw a picture that illustrates something you have learned this morning.

Try to use three cards, one idea per card. You will go around the room and share ONE of

your cards with a peer and she will share one card with you.

After you share the information on a card, you will give the card away to the person with whom you shared it.

Continue to another person when I say “Go!’

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What the Brain Needs….. Relationship – can’t separate subject from

teacher, particularly middle school Respect – remember that amygdala! Rigor – challenge and engagement Chunks – time to digest and process Movement – increases blood flow to brain Significance – related to the real world High Expectations – when little is

expected, little is achieved

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Implications for my Classroom

Interactive instead of didactic!!! Access prior knowledge Add new knowledge using many

modalities Apply knowledge in a variety of ways Assess and summarize

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Grow Dendrites

Automaticity

Active EngagementIn Learning

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WAIT time Average person needs 3-5 seconds to process a

question and formulate a response Students with disability need more Students who are ELL need more Students from lower SES need more Students who are left handed tend to need more Students who are boys tend to need more

What does WAIT time mean?

Why Am I Talking???

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Get the Brain’s AttentionPut Amygdala into the yellow zone

Ask suspenseful questions. Provide personal, moving examples. Have students give presentations. Incorporate props, costumes, vocal change. Use drama and role playing. Read text dramatically with “sound effects” and

stop at a “cliff hanger.”

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Access Prior Knowledge

Before starting a lesson, have students participate in a fun, quick game of review over the material.

Teach students to produce a graphic organizer that displays all they already know about a topic.

Have students work together in groups to connect all the information they have learned in a colorful, pictorial way (mind maps).

Use a Chalk Talk to show what they know.

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Add New Knowledge Use activities from the Strategy Ring. Link information to strong sensory stimulus. Teach students to use SQ3R. Have students stop then draw or discuss what

they are learning. Make student notes a work in progress, allowing

them to add pictures or what other students have written.

Always go from concrete to abstract.

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Apply Knowledge

Give students choice of various products or assignments to demonstrate learning using multiple learning styles or intelligences.

Relate knowledge to other disciplines and/or as many previous experiences as possible.

Play charades or word association games with material.

Use movement, dramatization and visualization frequently.

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Assess and Summarize Immediately after teaching new information,

have students discuss, draw, or act out the material.

The following day, have students create a graphic organizer or mind map of the material.

Conduct weekly discussions about lesson content.

Allow student to summarize learned material in a variety of ways: pictures, songs, charts.

Have students work in groups to write one-word summary.

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Role playing activities

Expert Interviews – one student is a reporter, the other an expert on the topic being studied.

Retro Party – visualization comparing time periods or describing events/places.

All the World’s a Stage – pause during the lesson and have students generate a 3-minute skit from lecture.

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Partner Share: 35 Ways Handout

Read handout on 35 Ways to Increase Memory and Learning.

Choose at least 3 activities from the list that you could apply in your teaching position.

Find a partner and share your ideas.

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Measurement and Evaluation

Mind Map Walking Tour Plus/Delta