learning and the brain - microsoft
TRANSCRIPT
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LEARNING AND THE BRAINPresented by: Brenda Arellano, MS, LPA
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ROAD MAP• Brain basics
• The teenage brain
• Learning and the brain
• Social media and the brain
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BRAIN TERMS
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AN INTRODUCTION TO THE BRAIN• Brain: Body’s command center
• Neurons: Brain cells
• Synapses: Brain connections
• Grey matter: Thinking and processing part of brain
• White matter: allows communication between brain areas and between brain and body
• Different parts of brain responsible for different abilities• Ex: Talking, sight, movement,
emotion
• Some parts of brain develop faster than others
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WHAT AFFECTS BRAIN DEVELOPMENT?
• Genes
• Nutrition
• Infection and disease• Chronic stress also slows affects
brain development
• Experiences with people and our surroundings• Chances to learn, play and explore
• Starts with parents and family. Includes teachers, friends and community as we get older
• Note: everyone’s brain is different
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BRAIN CHANGES OVER TIME
• 90% of brain growth in first 5 years• Brain size doubles in first year!
• 1 million brain connections made every second in early childhood!
• Newborns have all the brain cells they’ll have for rest of life
• Brain growth builds on itself• Connections as a baby lay
foundation for more complicated connections like motivation and problem solving as an adult
• Brain size is almost at adult size by age 6, but a lot of remodeling happens in teen years
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THE TEENAGE BRAIN
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BRAIN CHANGES IN TEEN YEARS• Brain gets rid of unneeded and unused
connections • Pruning
• Helps brain get more efficient
• Process starts in back of the brain• Brain gets thicker
• Especially in areas linked to social understanding and communication
• Better able to delay rewards• Abstract thinking• Teens rely on amygdala- emotion
center of brain- to make decisions because front of brain still under construction
• Might look like: • Taking more risks• Feeling a lot of strong emotions• Making impulsive decisions
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SOCIAL CHANGES IN TEEN BRAIN• Perspective taking: Understand others have different opinions and
experiences than them
• Identity formation: Trying to figure out who you are
• Relationships with friends and other teens become more important than relationships with family and parents
• Spotlight effect: Increased self awareness
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LEARNING AND THE BRAIN
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TIPS TO HELP YOUR BRAIN LEARN
• Build in breaks
• Your brain likes appetizers, not all-you-can-eat buffets• Study a little bit at a time vs. one
giant cram session the night before
• Do one thing at a time
• Try to connect new things to whatyou already know
• Test yourself
• If you don’t know, look it up
• Explain it to grandma
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LEARNING FROM SITUATIONS
• Be patient with yourself• What would you tell a friend if they went
through this same difficulty?
• Pause and reflect• Do you notice any patterns?
• Find new and creative ways to express emotions
• Talk through big decisions
• Think about pros and cons
• Give yourself credit• Focus on how far you’ve come, not just
how far you have to go
• Find positive role models
• Ask for help if you need it
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SOCIAL MEDIAAND THE BRAIN
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SOME NUMBERS
• 97% of Americans 13-17 use social media
• 95% of teens have access to a smart phone
• 45% of teens say they’re online “almost constantly”
• Average American teen spends 6-9 hours on social media per day
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SOCIAL MEDIA AND BRAIN CHANGES
• More social interaction – on and off line- linked to bigger amygdala (emotional processing)
• Teens more sensitive to online rejection than adults
• Teens more sensitive to social acceptance online than adults• Depressed teens less likely to feel
accepted online
• More sensitive to “reward” • Ex: likes and followers
• Peer feedback on social media shapes what our brain sees as “normal”
• Teens tend to have more emotions in response to social media use
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SO… IS SOCIAL MEDIA BAD?
• We don’t know yet
• Teens right now are first “digital natives”
• So far, it seems:
• There’s pros and cons to social media use for teens
• Social media affects people differently
• Social media more likely to be okay if use it sparingly (<2 hrs/day) and keep it positive
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THANK YOU! QUESTIONS? COMMENTS?