Glad you found it interesting, Steve!
To start, I guess it depends on how much you want to know, but
generally
I find it important to work with diagrams and video, some kind of
visual
support (I've started to include brain drawings as an assignment in my
class) as well as articles. The Berninger & Richards text works
well in
conjunction with the Brain Coloring Book to get you going. You don't
have to memorize everything, but it's helpful to understand the macro
and microstructures from a systems perspective in order to begin to
bridge the discourse.
Others may have different favorites, but I suggest The Jossey-Bass
Reader on the Brain and Learning... and (brand new, I haven't read my
copy): The Educated Brain: Essays in Neuroeducation. Meanwhile, I've
attached a couple of general articles by Howard-Jones and one of the
more interesting pieces on VAK by Sharp et al.
As to where this discussion is taking place? I am still relatively new
and don't have any peeps other than those I am cultivating in my
classes
and several open minded folks on the neuroscience faculty with UIdaho.
~em
-----Original Message-----
From: xmca-bounces@weber.ucsd.edu [mailto:xmca-bounces@weber.ucsd.edu]
On Behalf Of Steve Gabosch
Sent: Tuesday, September 15, 2009 7:16 PM
To: eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity
Subject: Re: [xmca] Neuroscience connections to learning and
relearning
Emily, I much appreciated your links to the Science Daily articles and
the Usha Goswami article. I learned a lot. Thanks much, and please
keep links like this coming! These are areas I know I would like to
learn much more about. A) On astrocytes etc.: If you had to put
together a crash course for CHAT-oriented researchers on neuroscience,
what authors, books, articles etc. come to mind that you would draw
from? B) As for the overview Goswami offers in her 2006 article
regarding 1) what neuroscience actually is discovering about learning
processes and how they might apply to the classroom and 2) what
neuromyths are emerging along with perhaps other hazards of the
commercialization of neuroeducation knowledge ... where is more of
this kind of discussion taking place these days?
- Steve
On Sep 15, 2009, at 12:34 PM, Mike Cole wrote:
Thanks Em-- And I googled Goswami neuromyths. Also very enlightening.
Goswami did early work with Ann Brown, former collaborator with us
at LCHC.
Now if we go back a step and look at the people who created the
label of
learning sciences, and their backgrounds, the shift from
"developmental
psychology" to developmental sciences, the appearance recently of the
handbook of cultural developmental science, ......... what a
tempest! Must
be a teapot in there somewhere. Simultaneous, fractilated paradigm
shifts?
Does anyone have the luxury of being able to organize a science
studies
interrogation of these movements? Seems really worthwhile.
mike
On Tue, Sep 15, 2009 at 12:16 PM, Duvall, Emily <emily@uidaho.edu>
wrote:
Thanks Mike... :-)
In general I like Goswami's work; I find her discussion of
neuromyths compelling and have had my grad students do additional
research on some of them. I am also particularly interested in ways
to
try to negotiate across different fields. I've attached my favorite
Goswami and a nice intro to neuroeducation.
As a side note: Monica (Hansen, who frequently shows up on the
list serve and is one of my doc students) and I took a neuroscience
journal club/ seminar last spring and found ourselves trying to make
sense of the work that is done with regard to education. We are
taking
another seminar right now and some of the folks who were in last
year's
class are presenting journal articles in their field, but are
trying to
make the links to human experience, particularly education. It's
been
interesting to discover how open minded the students and faculty
are...
one of the computational neuroscience faculty has taken up some
Vygotsky
reading as well as neuroeducation... of course Luria's work is a
door
opener and a point of mutual interest.
~em
-----Original Message-----
From: xmca-bounces@weber.ucsd.edu [mailto:xmca-
bounces@weber.ucsd.edu]
On Behalf Of Mike Cole
Sent: Tuesday, September 15, 2009 9:41 AM
To: eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity
Subject: Re: [xmca] Neuroscience connections to learning and
relearning
No one picked up on your interest in neuroeducation, Emily. A lot of
what I
read in this area strikes me as almost entirely without any
appreciation
of
education, or human experience, as a culturally mediated, co-
constructed
process. Do you have a favorite general ref you could point us to
that
you
resonate to??
mike
On Sun, Sep 13, 2009 at 8:50 AM, Duvall, Emily <emily@uidaho.edu>
wrote:
I thought some of you might one or both of these article summaries
interesting. The first really speaks to the new field of
neuroeducation
with regard to cellular learning... the nice thing about the
summary
is
it gives you an overview of learning at the cellular basis... very
clear
and easy to understand. Plus an introduction to astrocytes... :-)
The second piece actually discusses re-learning, which has been a
topic
lately.
What I personally find so interesting is the role of experience in
learning and relearning... I found myself thinking back to Shirley
Brice
Heath's work... it would be fun to go back to her work and look at
her
study through a neuroeducation lens.
1. Star-shaped Cells In Brain Help With Learning
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/09/090911132907.htm
Every movement and every thought requires the passing of specific
information between networks of nerve cells. To improve a skill or
to
learn something new entails more efficient or a greater number of
cell
contacts. Scientists can now show that certain cells in the brain
--
the
astrocytes -- actively influence this information exchange.
2. Forgotten But Not Gone: How The Brain Re-learns
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/11/081117110834.htm
Thanks to our ability to learn and to remember, we can perform
tasks
that other living things can not even dream of. However, we are
only
just beginning to get the gist of what really goes on in the brain
when
it learns or forgets something. What we do know is that changes in
the
contacts between nerve cells play an important role. But can these
structural changes account for that well-known phenomenon that it
is
much easier to re-learn something that was forgotten than to learn
something completely new?
~em
Emily Duvall, PhD
Assistant Professor Curriculum & Instruction
University of Idaho, Coeur d'Alene
1000 W. Hubbard Suite 242 | Coeur d'Alene, ID 83814
T 208 292 2512 | F 208 667 5275 emily@uidaho.edu |
www.cda.uidaho.edu
He only earns his freedom and his life, who takes them every day by
storm.
-- Johann Wolfgang Goethe
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