How the Brain Learns

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How the Brain Learns Learning is a biological process invented for survival. P. Wall, SJDC January 2012

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How the Brain Learns. Learning is a biological process invented for survival. P. Wall, SJDC January 2012. Understand Learn. Understand Learn Remember. Understand Learn Remember Put to use. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of How the Brain Learns

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How the Brain Learns Learning is a biological process invented for survival.

P. Wall, SJDCJanuary 2012

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Understand

Learn

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Understand

Learn Remember

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Understand

Learn Remember

Put to use

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If the upcoming final exam is weighted only 10% and currently I have an 87% average, do I have to take the final exam in order to receive a B in the course?

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LEARNING = Growing dendrites…

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…and making connections between neurons.

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So… why will a student say, “I understood everything during lecture, but when I went home I couldn’t do a single homework problem”?

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Messages are sent from

one neuron to another as

electrical signals across the synapse.

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When you learn something well

(through practice), the contact area of the synapse grows

wider, making a more solid

connection.

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With even more practice, the dendrites grow thicker

and the signals travel faster.

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Eventually, dendrites build a double

connection—which will last a long time.

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Janet Zadina:

“Fire until it’s wired.”

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If you learn something new but practice it only once or twice, the dendrite connection is fragile and will disappear quickly.

● Within 20 minutes, you remember only 60%.● Within 24 hours, you remember only 30%.

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But if you practice

within 24 hours,

and then practice

again later, you

remember 80%.

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You grow dendrites for exactly what you are practicing.

• If you listen or watch while problems are solved, you grow dendrites for listening or watching.

• If you actually solve the problems yourself, you grow dendrites for solving.

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Eventually, knowledge and skill

look like this…

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Cerebrum

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Cerebral cortex(grey matter) =neurons

Interior(white matter) =dendrite branches

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Corpus Callosum

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Experiment:• Lift your right foot a few inches

from the floor AND• Begin moving it in a clockwise

direction• Now, using your right index

finger, try to draw the number 6 in the air

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The left side of your brain, which controls the right side of your body, is responsible for rhythm and timing. It cannot handle two opposite movements at the same time, so it combines them into a single motion.

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Cerebrum

Highest Priority: SURVIVAL and Procreation

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Frontal lobe

Next highest priority:Emotional security

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Next:

Pedagogical implications

Jeopardy game “Brain-based pedagogy”

Powerful 5-minute anecdote from Sir Ken Robinson