Professional Learning for Busy Educators
146.5K views | +1 today
Follow
Professional Learning for Busy Educators
Professional learning in a glance (or two)!
Curated by John Evans
Your new post is loading...
Your new post is loading...
Scooped by John Evans
Scoop.it!

Why Identity and Emotion are Central To Motivating the Teen Brain

Why Identity and Emotion are Central To Motivating the Teen Brain | Professional Learning for Busy Educators | Scoop.it
For years, common experience and studies have prescribed that humans learn best in their earliest years of life – when the brain is developing at its fastest. Recently, though, research has suggested that the period of optimal learning extends well into adolescence.

The flurry of new findings may force a total rethinking of how educators and parents nurture this vulnerable age group, turning moments of frustration into previously unseen opportunities for learning and academic excitement.

New evidence shows that the window for formative brain development continues into the onset of puberty, between ages 9 and 13, and likely through the teenage years, according to Ronald Dahl, professor of community health and human development at the University of California, Berkeley. Dahl spoke at a recent Education Writers Association seminar on motivation and engagement.
No comment yet.
Rescooped by John Evans from Eclectic Technology
Scoop.it!

Why is My Teen So Forgetful? - An Ethical Island

Why is My Teen So Forgetful? - An Ethical Island | Professional Learning for Busy Educators | Scoop.it

"David Wilcox, of Musings on the Middle Years of Education, http://bit.ly/1cWl2of ; and I have worked together to create an infographic about the teen brain. It is based on a blog post he wrote over a year ago (Click here for that post) http://davidw.edublogs.org/2012/10/15/forgetfulness-in-teens/ to tackle the issue of Why Teens Forget. Through lots of research, checking facts, and rechecking facts, we have found that teens forgetfulness may be due to major changes in their brain. These changes can last into the college years.

 

While there is research that demonstrates the increased forgetfulness of “teens,” we also found that research suggests this time period is an awesome explosion of learning and discovery that takes them into adulthood."


Via Beth Dichter
deni tafe library's curator insight, December 4, 2013 4:57 PM

Some relevance for teeenage students

Audrey's curator insight, December 5, 2013 3:24 PM

Thanks for this Beth.  I will add this to my tutorials for students.  It is very helpful, Audrey.  Also have a look at www.hotmoodle.com.

David Baker's curator insight, December 8, 2013 1:01 AM

I plan to share this at the School Accountability meeting I am chairing next week.  We have a standing agenda item - the middle school student.  This is a great resource and in a great format to start conversations at school and home.