First keynote begins at 1:15 PM on Thursday, February 16
Cognitive and social science research is finding that the most successful students are those who are happy, self-regulated, social, intellectually stimulated, empathic, compassionate, mindful, moral and physically healthy. Discover the latest research on how to nurture happy, active, thoughtful, regulated, resilient and responsible students for school and life success.
Learning Objectives
- Ways to cultivate smarter, happier and healthier students
- Teaching to the whole student in a complex, diverse world
- Strategies for enhancing social-emotional learning
- Promoting student self-regulation and resiliency
- How to create challenging, caring and moral classrooms
- Applying brain and social science to enhance student success
- Benefits of fitness, play and laughter for math and achievement
- Connections between reading, dyslexia, reasoning and IQ
- Importance of social skills and collaborations for LD students
- Effects of hormones, emotions, and stress on children and teens
- Early childhood intervention and school readiness
>>Download pdf brochure for Educators
>>Download pdf brochure for Speech-Language Pathologists (ASHA)
Featured Conference Speakers
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Whole Brain Goes to School: What Science Tells Us about Helping Students Grow Smarter, Healthier and Happier
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Whole-Brain Child: Nurturing Students' Developing Minds
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The Whole Student in the Age of Globalization
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Whole Brain Learning for the Whole Brain Child: Why Growing Spatial Intelligence Matters!
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Brain-Targeted Teaching for the Whole Child and 21st Century Schools
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The Whole Child Approach for Effective Teaching
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Engaging the Whole Child: Teaching for Cognitive, Social and Emotional Learning
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HAPPIER MINDS: ENHANCING EMOTIONS, SELF-REGULATIONAND MINDFULNESS |
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Teaching Mind Reading Skills to Special Needs Children Janet Z. Giler, PhD, Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist; Author, ADDept Curriculum (1998) and Socially ADDept Teaching Social Skills to Children with ADHD, LD and Asperger's (Wiley, 2011); producer of the training DVD, From Acting Out to Fitting In (2000). A past professor of marriage and family therapy, she now trains and supervises therapists in how to help families that have children with special needs. She is an approved Supervisor with AAMFT (The American Association of Marriage and Family Therapists), and she enjoys supervising and training other professionals. |
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Raising Happiness in Schools Christine L. Carter, PhD, Sociologist; Director, Parenting Programs, Greater Good Science Center, University of California, Berkeley; Blogger, Psychology Today; Founder, The Raising Happiness Project; Author, Raising Happiness: 10 Simple Steps for More Joyful Kids and Happier Parents (2011) |
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Executive Function, Adversity and Stress Reactivity: Implications for Education and School Readiness Jelena Obradovic, PhD, Assistant Professor, Developmental and Psychological Sciences Program, School of Education, Stanford University; Research Investigator, The Peers and Wellness Study (PAWS), University of California, Berkeley; Co-Author, "Executive functioning and developmental neuroscience: Current progress and implications for early childhood education" (2011, The Handbook of Early Education) and "Biological sensitivity to context: The interactive effects of stress reactivity and family adversity on socio‐emotional behavior and school readiness" (2010, Child Development)
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Attention and Self-Regulation of Thoughts and Feelings
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Early School Success: Self-Regulation, Risk and Academic Achievement
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Say Yes to No: The Importance of Self-Discipline for Success and Happiness
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Empathy, Regulation and Prosocial Behavior in Children and Adolescents
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The Mindful Child: Teaching the New ABCs of Attention, Balance and Compassion
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Teaching Self-Calming to Special Needs Children: Evidence-Based Practices Children with special needs show impairments in self-regulation, flexibility, and adaptive decision-making. Relaxation is fundamental to these abilities. Relaxation involves integration of physiological and psychological factors to shift the nervous system from "fight/flight" to calm. By breaking down the physiological and psychological components of self-calming into a set of teachable skills, systematic practice and functional generalization can be accomplished. Mastery of self-calming skills promotes children's success at school, in the community, and, ultimately, in the workplace. Debra A. Collins, PhD, NCSP, School Psychologist, Broward County Schools, Florida; Co-Founder, S.T.O.P. and Relax, a systematic program for teaching relaxation and self-calming skills to children and young adults with disabilities such as autism, Asperger's disorder, ADHD, or anxiety Louise Goldberg, MA, Yoga Therapist, Relaxation Now; Registered Yoga Teacher and Massage Therapist; Co-Founder, S.T.O.P. and Relax, a systematic program for teaching relaxation and self-calming skills to children and young adults with disabilities such as autism, Asperger's disorder, ADHD, or anxiety |
SMARTER MINDS: RAISING IQ, REASONING ghj_amp READING |
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The Uncoupling of Reading and IQ in Dyslexics Compared to Typical Readers Emilio Ferrer-Caja, PhD, Associate Professor, Department of Psychology, University of California, Davis; Co-Principal Investigator, The Neurodevelopment of Reasoning Ability (NORA), University of California, Berkeley; Co-Author, "Uncoupling of reading and IQ over time: Empirical evidence for a definition of dyslexia" (2010, Psychological Science) and "Fluid reasoning and the developing brain" (2009, Frontiers in Neuroscience) |
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The Dyslexic Advantage: Unlocking the Cognitive Potential of Dyslexic Students
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Smarter Minds: Brains, Intelligence and Schools Dennis Garlick, PhD, Postdoctoral Researcher, Department of Psychology, University of California, Los Angeles; Author, Intelligence and the Brain: Solving the Mystery of Why People Differ in IQ and How a Child Can Be a Genius (2010), and "Understanding the nature of the general factor of intelligence: The role of individual differences in neural plasticity as an explanatory mechanism" (2002, Psychological Review) |
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Engaging the Mind for Higher Intellectual Performance in All Students Yvette Jackson, EdD, Visiting Lecturer, Harvard University; CEO, National Urban Alliance for Effective Education; Former Director of Gifted Programs and Executive Director of Instruction and Professional Development, New York City Public Schools; Author, The Pedagogy of Confidence: Inspiring High Intellectual Performance in Urban Schools (2011) |
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Smarter Teaching Leads to Smarter Students: Lesson Designs for Optimal Learning |
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Helping Students Organize their Brains for Joyful, Smarter Reading
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HEALTHIER MINDS: PROMOTING PLAY ghj_amp PHYSICAL EXERCISE |
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The Basic Science of Social Play and Joy: Implications for Mental Health and Education
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Connections Between Physical Exercise and Academic Achievement |
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Brain Fitness, Lifestyle and Life-Long Learning |
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Effects of Aerobic Play on Overweight Children's Cognition and Academic Achievement
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The Power of Play to Enhance Learning, Build Social Connections and Encourage Curiosity Martha M. Kaufeldt, MA, Educational Consultant; former teacher; Author, Begin with the Brain (2009, 2nd Edition) and Teachers, Change Your Bait! Brain Compatible Differentiated Instruction (2005); Co-Author, Think Big, Start Small: How to Differentiate Instruction in a Brain-Friendly Classroom (2011) |
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Creating Exercise Breaks in the Classroom Bobbi Jarvis, BA, President, Exercise Breaks; Exercise Instructor; Toys Designer for the last 21 years for companies such as Hasbro Toys, Fisher-Price and Little Tykes. Jarvis started the Exercise Breaks in the Classroom program in 2008 in collaboration with the Bristol-Warren Regional School District |
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TEEN BRAINS: EMOTIONS AND SOCIAL SKILLS |
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Adolescent Brains on Hormones: Social, Emotional and Motivational Changes and Opportunities Ronald E. Dahl, MD,Professor, Community Health ghj_amp Human Development and Joint Medical Program, School of Public Health, University of California, Berkeley; Author, "The role of puberty in the developing adolescent brain" (2010, Human Brain Mapping) and "Pubertal development and behavior: Hormonal activation of social and motivational tendencies" (2010, Brain and Cognition) |
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Reducing Teen Stress by Promoting Positive Emotions Judith T. Moskowitz, PhD, MPH, Associate Professor in Residence, School of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco; Researcher and Instructor, Coping and Emotional Development for Adolescents to Reduce Stress Pilot Program (CEDARS), Osher Center for Integrative Medicine, University of California, San Francisco; Author, "Is benefit finding good for your health? Pathways linking positive life changes after stress and physical health outcomes" (2011, Current Directions in Psychological Sciences) |
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Why Do They Act That Way?: A Guide to the Adolescent Brain David A. Walsh, PhD, Psychologist; Faculty, University of Minnesota; Founder, National Institute on Media and the Family; Founder, Mind Positive Parenting; Author, WHY Do They Act That Way?: A Survival Guide to the Adolescent Brain for You and Your Teen (2005) |
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Understanding the Emotional Teenage Brain: Mood and Peers Amanda E. Guyer, PhD, Assistant Professor in Human and Community Development, Center for Mind and Brain, University of California, Davis; Winner of the highly prestigious William T. Grant Scholars Award; Co-Author, "Neural circuitry underlying affective response to peer feedback in adolescence" (2011, Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience) and "Probing the neural correlates of anticipated peer evaluation in adolescence" (2009, Child Development) |
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Teen Brains, IQ and Beyond: The Different Ways of Being Smart Jeb Schenck, PhD, Adjunct Professor, University of Wyoming; Science Teacher of the Year, Tandy Scholar Teacher; Genentech Access Excellence Fellow; Einstein Finalist, and Presidential Awardee; Author, Teaching and the Adolescent Brain: An Educator's Guide (2011) and Learning, Teaching and the Brain (2003) |
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SOCIAL-EMOTIONAL-MORAL MINDS: ENCOURAGING ETHICS ghj_amp SCHOOL SUCCESS |
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Nice is Not Enough: Integrating Social and Moral Development Research into Classroom Practices Larry P. Nucci, PhD, Psychologist; Research Educator, Institute of Human Development, University of California, Berkeley; Adjunct Professor, Cognition and Development, Graduate School of Education, University of California, Berkeley; Author, Nice is Not Enough: Facilitating Moral Development (2008) and The Handbook of Moral and Character Education (2008); Co-Author, Parenting for Character (2008) |
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BrainTrust: How the Mind Makes Morals Patricia S. Churchland, BPhil, Professor Emerita, Philosophy Department, University of California, San Diego; Author, Braintrust: What Neuroscience Tells Us about Morality (2011), Brain-Wise: Studies in Neurophilosophy (2002), and The Computational Brain (1994) |
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Enhancing Social and Emotional Learning in Children and Teens: Implications for School Success Joseph A. Durlak, PhD, Professor Emeritus of Psychology, Loyola University Chicago; Co-Author, "The impact of enhancing students' social and emotional learning: A meta-analysis of school-based universal interventions" (2011, Journal of Child Development) and "Promoting social and emotional development is an essential part of students' education" (2011, Human Development) |
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Wired to Connect: Creating Classrooms that Nurture Social and Autistic Minds Sam Goldstein, PhD, Assistant Clinical Instructor, Department of Psychiatry, School of Medicine, University of Utah; School Psychologist, Editor-in-Chief, Journal of Attention Disorders; Co-Author, Raising Resilient Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder: Strategies to Maximize Their Strengths, Coping with Adversity and Developing Social Minds (2011), Raising a Self-Disciplined Child (2009) and Seven Steps to Improve Your Child's Social Skills (2006) |
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Affective and Social Neuroscience: Implications of Social Emotions for Schools Mary Helen Immordino-Yang, EdD, Assistant Professor, Rossier School of Education; Research Assistant Professor, Brain and Creativity, University of Southern California; Author of "Implications of affective and social neuroscience for educational theory" (2011, Educational Philosophy and Theory) |
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Effective Collaborations: Reframing Social Responsibility for Educating the Whole Child Carol A. Kochhar-Bryant, EdD, Professor of Special Education, Graduate School of Education and Human Development; George Washington University; Past President, Division on Career Development and Transition; International Council for Exceptional Children; Co-Author, Effective Collaboration for Educating the Whole Child (2010) and Pathways to Successful Transitions for Youth with Disabilities (2008) |
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