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Showing posts from January, 2021

Memory Systems

I would like to give some of the neuroanatomy to you in this blog.  It will allow you to have some visuals, and spend a bit of time delving in, if you so choose. MEMORY There is a wealth of information in the neuro and cognitive sciences about memory and learning that can be useful for understanding the most effective forms of education. Memory is not a single construct. There is short term and long term memory.  We will talk about short term memory later, which is also not a single construct. LONG TERM MEMORY Long term memory is divided into Explicit (conscious) and Implicit (non-conscious) Explicit memory is also called Declarative Memory.  Think about the fact that you can explain, or declare what you remember.   It is further divided into Semantic Memory and Episodic Memory. Semantic Memory is all about categories of information. Episodic Memory is memory for events.   We can also think of memory as passive and active.  Active memory processes require the frontal lobe, while pass

I Love School (when it's closed)

The title of this entry is a T-shirt I had when I was about 9 years old.  The "I LOVE SCHOOL" was in big letters, and when you got up close you could read the ending "(when its closed)".  I loved that T-shirt, because it just was so true. For those struggling with the assignment, I thought I would share a bit of my own personal narrative.  Of course I could give so much more detail, but this is the short version.  Feel free to make yours as long as you like. Good Schools:  A Personal Narrative The suburb I grew up in was supposed to have g ood schools.   However, I can say with certainty that 99% of the content presented in the schooling I experienced did not contribute in a meaningful way to what I believe about who I am, and what I am meant to be in this world.  Rather than helping me understand my place in the world, the schooling I encountered was a zero sum competition. That meant some won, and some lost.  From kindergarten to high school I found myself on the

The Narrative Curriculum

 I absolutely love the work of Ivor Goodson .  Truth be told, I asked him to interview as part of my doctoral thesis process.  He declined, probably because he did not see himself as a part of the whole neuroeducation movement.  However, I could clearly see the connections. When we think about the brain and how it learns, we must understand the primary purpose of the brain is to serve the individual.  This includes the way in which it organizes itself to protect against harm, both physical and emotional and the way it learns. My favorite professor when I was at Rutgers Center for Molecular and Behavioral Neuroscience was Gyorgy Buzaki .  He has done beautiful work in the art of electrophysiology.  This is the area of neuroscience that examines and measures the electrical activity of the brain.  He had this rather humorous way of asking the class a question and then giving the answer that was unexpected.  It did seem to help with creating a memory.  The startling, unexpected answer, alw