Every year, millions of parents trust that the professionals who teach their children know something about the brain and processes of learning. But most schools of education offer psychology, not neurology, courses. At best, these psychology courses provide indirect information about the brain and how children actually learn.
Teaching with the Brain in Mind fills this gap with the latest practical, easy-to-understand research on learning and the brain. Consider important questions such as
- Biologically, can you truly expect to get and hold students’ attention for long periods of time? – How has research on rewards been misinterpreted? – Do students actually “forget” what we teach them, or do we ask them to recall information in the wrong way? – What are the surprising benefits for learning across the board when students participate in some sort of physical education or movement?
From its primer on brain biology to in-depth discussions of emotion, memory, and recall, Teaching with the Brain in Mind is an invaluable tool for any educator looking to better reach students through truly brain-compatible teaching and learning.
(Book description from the publisher, Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development)
Setting an example is not the main means of influencing others; it is the only means. Albert Einstein, Scientist