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Interesting Links about the Brain and Education
The Brain and Education
Below are some interesting links about the brain and its structure in relation to education and the classroom.
How Can Research on the Brain Inform Education?
This website constructs an interesting metaphor--the brain as a “jungle” of chaos. The section on multiple intelligences and Howard Gardner’s theory of seven intelligences is very relevant to the idea of plural selves residing within one person, and how the relationship between these selves affects outward behavior not just in the classroom, but in all aspects of daily life. The chart at the end, “Implications for Teaching,” is also very helpful in putting this idea into the context of education.
[See this link for more informatino on Gardner’s theory of seven intelligences]
Fischer's Skill Theory
The first link (it’s a PDF) on Fischer’s Skill Theory deals with the organization and variation of the mind, as well as the activity within a personality in relation to the rest of the world.
News in Neuroscience
-This site contains an extensive list of articles regarding the issue of an “expanding brain” in education, one that has the ability to grow and change with each new topic learned. It is also concerned with differences in learning styles and environments, and how these differences account for diversity of mind. It asks a very important question: “How would it affect how we teach and how students learn if everyone believed that the kinds of environments we create for learning, how we teach, and the learning strategies we offer students could result in better mental equipment they will use throughout life? “
Brains.org
-This site deals with approaches for teachers to use when thinking about the brain and education in the classroom including a “Layered Curriculum”; applies current neuroscience research to teaching.
Layered Curriculum
Layered Curriculum can be viewed here.
Child Brain Research
-An approach by Dr. Nobaru Kobayashi to integrate neuroscience and education; includes “child science,” resources, projects, and ongoing child research in Japan, as well as providing relevant links and a message board for discussion.