Sunday Leftovers
October 19, 2014New NJ Spotlight Column: N.J.’s Teacher Unions: Implosion, Irrelevance, or Evolution?
October 21, 2014“Neuromyths” in Education
Paul A. Howard Jones in ”Neuroscience and Education: Myths and Messages” describes the neuromyths that have leaked into teacher education schools and the teaching corps.. (Neuromyth: “a misconception generated by a misunderstanding, a misreading or a misquoting of facts scientifically established [by brain research] to make a case for use of brain research in education and other contexts.”) Dr. Howard further describes neuromyths as stemming from “uninformed interpretations of genuine scientific facts [that] are promoted by victims of their own wishful thinking.”
The paper gets pretty technical, but relevant here is the prevalence of neuromyths among teachers. The paper includes a chart of the percentage of teachers from the U.K., the Netherlands, Turkey, Greece, and China who believe in these misconceptions of the way students learn. It’s a pretty fair guess that these that many U.S. teachers, as well as much of the public, fall for these myths too.
Here’s a few education neuromyths:
- We mostly only use 10% of our brain.
- Individuals learn better when they receive information in their preferred learning style (for example, visual, auditory, and kinesthetic).
- Short bouts of co-ordination exercises can improve integration of left and right hemispheric brain function.
- Differences in hemispheric dominance (left brain or right) can explain individual differences among learners.
- Children are less attentive after sugary drinks and snacks.
3 Comments
You left out a big one:
The typical 'plastic' brain, whose synaptic networks are constantly adapting to accommodate anticipated workload, can SIMULTANEOUSLY become more effective at both critical thinking (i.e., slow, content-rich reading followed by contemplative and complex thought) and hyper-digital activity (i.e., bombardment with many relatively shallow messages of uncertain quality delivered over multiple media).
Oh, by the way, this neuromyth—our students can have it all, simultaneously—underpins the CCSS.
Well, the researchers left out a big one. I was just listing their findings. But well-played, sir.
Recommended reading: The Shallows by Nicholas Carr