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        The Adolescent Brain –Learning Strategies & Teaching Tips
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1.         Brain Compatible Strategies for Increasing Learning    Storytelling    e Can be real or fictional   e Should be age  and experience appropriate   e Makes an emotional connection to the audience     Reciprocal Teaching     Think  Pair  Share    e Use anytime you have asked for individuals in a group to make a response  1 e  answer a question  give  an opinion  etc   o Make your request   o Tell participants to think about their response   o Now tell them to turn to their neighbor and discuss their responses   o Ask for volunteers to share what they heard   they can share their own response or that of their  discussion partner   e You tend to get more students willing to respond and the responses are richer     Metaphor  Analogy and Simile    e This makes the connection between something students are already familiar with and the new  information    e For example  when dealing with statistical information that has large numbers  try to convert those  numbers into smaller more concrete statistics     Presently  one out of five people will develop skin  cancer by the age of 65  This means that at least six students in this class of 30 will have skin cancer  at some point in their life        Visuals Graphics    e A picture is worth a thousand words    e Have the students visualize an image and connect it to them personally     Imagine that           Close  your eyes and picture            What do you see when I say          e Graphics don   t necessarily mean graphs   use
2.     NY A     5 POT        T S        The adolescent brain is still developing and therefore requires different brain compatible strategies for learning   This section describes the adolescent brain  details specific learning strategies in    Things to Know 1 5    and     Brain Compatible Strategies for Increasing Learning     and offers practical tips for teaching teenagers in     Teaching Tips to Keep in Mind When Presenting        Current research states that the brain undergoes two main periods of increased production of gray matter  the  first begins during fetal development and lasts until around 18 months of age and the second occurs during  early adolescence   Gray matter is responsible for the generation of nerve impulses  processing of the brain   s  information   while white matter is responsible for the transfer of brain information from one lobe to another  and out to the spinal cord  This transmission of nerve impulses is assisted by a fatty layer that wraps around  the neuron   s axon called a myelin sheath  Gray matter does not have a myelin sheath  while white matter  does  This myelin sheath allows impulses to travel faster and more efficiently  but isn   t fully formed  through  a process called myelination  until around age twenty five     with the frontal lobe being the last area of the  brain to be myelinated  The incomplete myelination and rapid growth of gray matter that are characteristic of  adolescent brains do not allow the same cortical connections
3.  cartoons  diagrams  simple flow charts  etc     Mnemonics  e A good tool to help us remember seemingly disconnected items of information   e RoyG  Biv is a mnemonic to help us remember the colors of the visible light spectrum in order     Red   Orange  Yellow  Green  Blue  Indigo  and Violet   e ABC   s of Melanoma are a mnemonic for remembering what to look for in a skin spot   e This is more powerful if the students are the ones to create the mnemonic     Hands on   Simulations  e Another opportunity for visual and emotional connections   e Be sure your instructions and expectations are clear   e The majority of students are visual learners  a large minority are tactile kinesthetic learners and a very  small number of students are auditory learners   e Does not need to be complex     something as simple as putting your hand into a fist to show the  approximate size of your heart 1s a simulation     9         Learning Strategies          Wait Time  e Give students time to process your question before asking for a response  Waiting between 5 and  10 seconds before calling on students will increase the number of hands up and the quality of the  answers     Rhythm  Rhyme  and Rap    e Putting information to music or a rhyme can increase memory     how did you learn the alphabet in the  right order   e You can have these already prepared or challenge the students to do this     Chunking    e A chunk is any coherent group of items of information that we can remember as if it wer
4.  letters could fit together in a more meaningful way  NBC  is now a Single item of information  as is LAX and so on   Short term memory stores about 7 pieces of information for about 30 seconds  If the information is  not easily remembered through chunking or other strategies  it will be quickly forgotten   Working memory stores about 7 pieces of information for 20 to 30 minutes  If the brain does not  determine the information to be meaningful  it is not stored in long term memory and is lost   Use Brain Compatible Strategies such as Chunking  Storytelling  Mnemonics  and Rhythm  Rhyme   and Rap     Thing to Know   2  The addition of emotion can help students remember     Emotion drives attention and attention drives learning    The young adolescent brain does not have a fully developed frontal lobe  which houses higher level  thinking  so many times the thinking gets accomplished by the amygdala  which typically stores  emotional memory     Emotion can also work against learning     no learning occurs if a student feels threatened  Something  as simple as being called on to answer a question or asked to read aloud can produce a threatening  situation for some students    Use humor not sarcasm when teaching  Be careful with humor     you do not want to offend any  student  Use yourself as the    brunt of the joke       Use Brain Compatible Strategies such as Wait Time  Think Pair Share  and Reading Buddies to reduce  stress    Use Brain Compatible Strategies such as Storytel
5.  that occur in adulthood  thus  adolescent thinking  is in a realm of its own     The frontal lobe houses the area of the brain where we process higher cortical functions like reasoning   problem solving  short term memory  planning and executing behavior  language  motor function  social  mirroring  judgment  and impulse control  Until the frontal lobe has matured  other parts of the brain  temporal  lobe  parietal lobe and the amygdala  are used for language development and decision making  Because  of the involvement of other parts of the brain in these functions  adolescents tend to lack impulse control   demonstrate more irrational behaviors  and often make decisions based on their feelings rather than logical  thought processing  All of these characteristics affect their ability to learn     Learning is critical to both prospering and surviving  The brain   s main function is to promote survival of  the body  However  rather than attending to all the incoming stimuli  the brain filters out about 99  of the  information coming from the senses  Two factors strongly influence whether the brain pays attention to a  piece of information    1  Ifthe information has meaning    2  Ifthe information causes an emotional response     Meaning and emotion are crucial elements to grab the brain   s attention and thereby aid learning  Learning  in its simplest form is a process of building neural networks in the brain  These networks are formed in  three different ways     through con
6. crete experiences  symbolic learning  and abstract learning  Think about a  toddler learning about the names of animals  A concrete experience would consist of taking the child to the  zoo to see  hear  smell  and touch the animals  When you return home  you read books and look at pictures of  the animals for a symbolic experience  Eventually  children are ready to make generalizations about animals  that they did not see at the zoo or in their books   this is abstract thinking  The brain makes the strongest  connections through concrete experiences  Without concrete experiences  symbolic and abstract learning  have little or no meaning  Because abstract thought processes are not well developed until late adolescence   around age 18 to 20   the most effective teaching styles encompass methods that create concrete experiences  within the boundaries of the school setting     Learning Strategies               Learning Strategies    Thing to Know   1  A young adolescent brain can hold seven items of information  plus or    minus two items  in working memory   An effective strategy that allows teenagers to work with larger and larger amounts of information is  to show them how the information fits together  For example  which list can you recall with more  accuracy  NB CLA XC BSD VDA BC or NBC LAX CBS DVD ABC  You can recall the entire  second list even though the number of letters and the letters themselves were the same and in the same  order because you were able to see how the
7. e a single item   This is why a mnemonic device works  Chunking works best when information is limited to 9 pieces  of information or less    e For example  remembering the 12 cranial nerves is both difficult and longer than remembering 9  nerves  So  we use two devices  a mnemonic that chunks or separates a large amount of information  into smaller phrases and arranges the information in an easy to remember sequence     On Old Olympus  Towering Top A Famous Vocal German Viewed Some Hops    lets us remember both the order and first  letter of each cranial nerve  Another example is listed under Things to Know  1  By chunking the  letters into phrases we remember like IBM and TWA  it is easier to remember the entire list of letters     Much of the information for this section has been adapted with permission from     Wolfe  Pat  Brain Matters  Translating the Research to Classroom Practice   ASCD  Alexandria  VA  2001  1 207     10          Teaching Tips To Keep in Mind When Presenting  Preparation    Be organized with your presentation  Keep things moving and decrease    down time     Middle school students  can find very creative ways to fill the time     Communicate with the classroom teacher  Contact the classroom teacher before your presentation  You should expect this person to be present during  your presentation and be in charge of classroom management  Share this expectation with the teacher     Dress   As you are dressed    So shall you be perceived    As you are perc
8. eived    So shall you be treated    Harry Wong  The First Days of School    No sarcasm  Yes  middle school students can really enjoy this but only when you know them well and have established a  good relationship with them  Even then  use this with great caution     Humor  Make sure the joke is on you and not the students  This can really de escalate a situation if used properly     Proximity   Stand close to students     move around the room as you are presenting  but do not touch  Again  you have not  established a relationship with the students to know who would respond favorably to a touch on the shoulder   pat on the back  etc     Give directions that are clear   Remember the adolescent brain can only hold 7 pieces of information  plus or minus two   Whenever possible   give directions orally and visually     on the board  in PowerPoint  on an overhead  or on a handout  Leave  these visuals displayed until the task or activity is finished     Establish clear expectations    If you want students to move quietly into groups  say so  Give a time frame and stick to it         I need this task  to be finished in 5 minutes      Kitchen timers are nice tools to keep handy for this  but most schoolrooms have  clocks on the wall and most students have watches or cell phones      You are the adult and the professional    Yes  you can be friendly and approachable  but you are not their friend  Be sincere and honest with the  students  If you don   t have an answer to a question  te
9. ling and Rhythm  Rhyme  and Rap to make an  emotional connection     Thing to Know   3  The brain is social  amp  requires interaction in order to develop properly     The brain   s primary function is to promote survival of the body  Hundreds of years ago  a person  stood a better chance of surviving as a member of a group versus as an individual  Thus  humans have  evolved into social beings and require social interaction in order to mature appropriately    Use Brain Compatible Strategies such as Think Pair Share  Simulations  and Reciprocal Teaching     Thing to Know   4  Practice rehearsal ts critical to learning for the long term     Understanding must be checked frequently to ensure that the rehearsal is correct  This can be  accomplished simply by asking questions such as    What do I need to clarify     or    What questions  might you have       Use of the Socratic Teaching method  asking the audience questions  will allow feedback and  verification of understanding  For example  you could ask     I just used the word    asymmetry       can  anyone tell me what that means       Use Brain Compatible Strategies such as Analogy  Metaphor and Simile  Simulations  Storytelling   and Rhythm  Rhyme  and Rap     Thing to Know   5  We take in more information visually than through any other sense     We have a tremendous capacity to store pictures in long term memory   Use Brain Compatible Strategies such as Visuals  amp  Graphics  Storytelling  and Hands on activities     8  
10. ll them so     they will respect honesty more than a made   up answer  It will also lend more credibility to the other facts you have told them  You can offer to look up  the unknown answer and email it to their teacher     Respect    Show the students the same respect you expect from them     Fairness  Fairness is an important idea to a middle school student  They need to see that you are not playing favorites     11         Learning Strategies    
    
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