Making Education Brain Science
Ruth Fremson/The New York Times
By JENNY ANDERSON
Published: April 13, 2012
LAST month, two kindergarten classes at the Blue School were hard at
work doing what many kindergartners do: drawing. One group pursued a
variation on the self-portrait. “That’s me thinking about my brain,” one
5-year-old-girl said of her picture. Down the hall, children with oil
pastels in hand were illustrating their emotions, mapping where they
started and where they ended. For one girl, sadness ended at home with a
yummy drink and her teddy bear.
Grappling so directly with thoughts and emotions may seem odd for such
young brains, but it is part of the DNA of the Blue School, a downtown
Manhattan private school that began six years ago as a play group. From
the beginning, the founders wanted to incorporate scientific research
about childhood development into the classroom. Having rapidly grown to
more than 200 students in preschool through third grade, the school has
become a kind of national laboratory for integrating cognitive
neuroscience and cutting-edge educational theory into curriculum,
professional development and school design.
“Schools were not applying this new neurological science out there to
how we teach children,” said Lindsey Russo, whose unusual title,
director of curriculum documentation and research, hints at how
seriously the Blue School takes this mission. “Our aim is to take those
research tools and adapt them to what we do in the school.”
So young children at the Blue School learn about what has been called
“the amygdala hijack” — what happens to their brains when they flip out.
Teachers try to get children into a “toward state,” in which they are
open to new ideas. Periods of reflection are built into the day for
students and teachers alike, because reflection helps executive
function — the ability to process information in an orderly way, focus
on tasks and exhibit self-control. Last year, the curriculum guide was
amended to include the term “meta-cognition”: the ability to think about
thinking.
“Having language for these mental experiences gives children more
chances to regulate their emotions,” said David Rock, who is a member of
the Blue School’s board and a founder of NeuroLeadership Institute, a global research group dedicated to understanding the brain science of leadership.
That language is then filtered through a 6-year-old’s brain.
Miles, one of the kindergartners drawing their emotions, showed off his
picture and described the battle it depicted between happiness and anger
this way: “The happy fights angry, but angry gets blocked by the force
field and can’t get out.” Happiness could escape through his mouth,
Miles explained. But anger got trapped, turning into sadness.
With ample research showing that negative emotions impede learning while
positive emotions broaden children’s attention and their ability to
acquire and retain information, strategies for regulating emotions are
getting more emphasis in progressive schools across the country.
“The science of learning is something teachers are paying more and more attention to,” said Mariale Hardiman, director of the Neuro-Education Initiative
at the Johns Hopkins University School of Education. She was not
familiar with the Blue School but said she would endorse any school
trying to integrate academic and emotional education.
“We can no longer think that the two systems are separate,” Dr. Hardiman
said, “and that children should leave their emotions at the door.”
For all the attention brain science is receiving in schools, experts say
it is too soon to know whether its application will lead to improved
academic outcomes. And some researchers say that while they embrace new
ideas — especially around self-control — they personally prefer a more
traditional approach to pedagogy.
“The older approach has led to some very good outcomes,” said Sam Wang,
an associate professor of molecular biology and neuroscience at
Princeton University and co-author of “Welcome to Your Child’s Brain,” a
child development primer for parents.
But the Blue School clearly has its appeal. This year, it had eight
applications for each spot in its program for 3-year-olds, making it a
typically hypercompetitive Manhattan private school. Tuition for
students in kindergarten through third grade is $31,910 a year.
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end quote from:
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/15/nyregion/at-the-blue-school-kindergarten-curriculum-includes-neurology.html
I think it is possible, depending upon how people teach these new ideas that good outcomes could result. I think that one of the problems with education has always been the criteria for how outcomes are judged. When public education came into the mainstream schools were designed around how to make obedient factory workers during the early industrial revolution. Whereas in today's fast moving world I would like to see schools more designed around how to make entrepreneurs simply because entrepreneurs tend to be much more adaptable to the kinds of changes society will likely be going through this century. I think it likely that the age of extreme specialization is mostly over except for the few doctors, Nurses, Lawyers and a few other professions. However, most people will have to reinvent themselves multiple times within their lifetimes. It is said that the average person will have (at least) 5 different careers in their lifetime so being able to reinvent yourself and your life has become a necessity for everyone. And even if your first career is to be a baseball player or a rock musician it is fairly certain for about 99% of the people that they are going to have to have 4 or more careers after that to survive to old age.
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