Professional Learning for Busy Educators
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Professional Learning for Busy Educators
Professional learning in a glance (or two)!
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Rescooped by John Evans from iGeneration - 21st Century Education (Pedagogy & Digital Innovation)
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We Drastically Underestimate the Importance of Brain Breaks in school - Edutopia

We Drastically Underestimate the Importance of Brain Breaks in school - Edutopia | Professional Learning for Busy Educators | Scoop.it
When it comes to optimizing learning, we don’t value breaks enough, neuroscientists suggest in a new study.

Via Tom D'Amico (@TDOttawa)
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How Kids Learn Better By Taking Frequent Breaks Throughout The Day

How Kids Learn Better By Taking Frequent Breaks Throughout The Day | Professional Learning for Busy Educators | Scoop.it

Excerpted from Teach Like Finland: 33 Simple Strategies For Joyful Classrooms (c) 2017 by Timothy D. Walker. Used with permission of the publisher, W. W. Norton. 


"Like a zombie, Sami*—one of my fifth graders—lumbered over to me and hissed, “I think I’m going to explode! I’m not used to this schedule.” And I believed him. An angry red rash was starting to form on his forehead.

Yikes, I thought, what a way to begin my first year of teaching in Finland. It was only the third day of school, and I was already pushing a student to the breaking point. When I took him aside, I quickly discovered why he was so upset.

Throughout this first week of school, I had gotten creative with my fifth grade timetable. If you recall, students in Finland normally take a fifteen-minute break for every forty-five minutes of instruction. During a typical break, the children head outside to play and socialize with friends.

I didn’t see the point of these frequent pit stops. As a teacher in the United States, I’d usually spent consecutive hours with my students in the classroom. And I was trying to replicate this model in Finland. The Finnish way seemed soft, and I was convinced that kids learned better with longer stretches of instructional time. So I decided to hold my students back from their regularly scheduled break and teach two forty-five-minute lessons in a row, followed by a double break of thirty minutes. Now I knew why the red dots had appeared on Sami’s forehead."