A nicely balanced and well-informed article by Melinda Wenner Moyer.
-
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Andrew Watson
Andrew began his classroom life as a high-school English teacher in 1988, and has been working in or near schools ever since. In 2008, Andrew began exploring the practical application of psychology and neuroscience in his classroom. In 2011, he earned his M. Ed. from the “Mind, Brain, Education” program at Harvard University. As President of “Translate the Brain,” Andrew now works with teachers, students, administrators, and parents to make learning easier and teaching more effective. He has presented at schools and workshops across the country; he also serves as an adviser to several organizations, including “The People’s Science.” Andrew is the author of "Learning Begins: The Science of Working Memory and Attention for the Classroom Teacher."
Tags
ADHD adolescence attention autism book review boundary conditions classroom advice conference speakers constructivism/direct instruction creativity desirable difficulty development dual coding elementary school embodied cognition emotion evolution executive function exercise experts and novices gender high school homework intelligence long-term memory math methodology middle school mindfulness Mindset motivation neuromyths neuroscience online learning parents psychology reading retrieval practice self-control skepticism sleep STEM stress technology working memoryRecent Comments
- Incremental Steps with Growth Mindset |Education & Teacher Conferences on Growing Mindsets in Argentina?
- Comic Sans Font: The Most Popular Casual Typeface on Don’t Hate on Comic Sans; It Helps Dyslexic Readers (Asterisk)
- Grit Theory for Personal Development: Succeed with Tenacity on Grit: The Power of Passion and Perseverance by Angela Duckworth
- What is cognitive break? – Focuskeeper Glossary on Can Quiet Cognitive Breaks Help You Learn?
- Schools shift toward a new approach to homework – Spartan Shield on “Students Simply Cannot Improve”: Handwritten Notes vs. Laptop Notes
ABOUT THE BLOG