Kategorier: Alle - feedback - mindfulness - pedagogy - learning

av Greg Donoghue 8 år siden

438

ResearchProjects

Learning is an adaptive process that involves the alteration of neural connections, providing organisms with survival and reproductive advantages. This capacity is influenced by a variety of factors including environmental conditions, pedagogy, and feedback mechanisms.

ResearchProjects

thinkEd's Wellbeing Schema

Attend

Cognite

Play

Belong

Connect

Accomplish

Thrive

Seligman's PERMA

What is subjective wellbeing - it is an emotional or cognitive state of self-awareness - it is 'like' being something. This is the very question of consciousness - what is it 'like' to be someone or something. Many neuroscientists consider this to be an illusion, and that our decisions are made at a much lower cognitive level, subconscious, automatic mechanisms, and the conscious mind only post-hoc creates rationalisations for those decisions.

So why would this have evolved? Is it a useless spandrel, or does it afford an evolutionary advantage? If the latter, then what advantage does a subjective conscious awareness of one's wellbeing afford the invidivual? And if a sense of SWB does afford such an advantage, does it necessarily follow that education that improves that sense of SWB will in fact be evident in actual levels of (Darwinian) wellbeing?

What evidence is there for improvements in SWB actually being associated (causally) with actual improvements in physical (physiological, evolutionary) wellbeing: i.e. the advancement of the selfish gene?

Or, as some would have it, it's just superfluous nonsense that is driven by religious interests, and has not real impact on survival or reproductive outcomes.

Achievement

Engagement

Relationships

Positive Emotions

Meaning

Evolutionary Psychology

Chemistry

Tools

Investigative

fMRI
PET
MRI

Neuro Manipulators

Pharamaceutical
Hypnosis
Meditation
Plasticity Practice
Arrowsmith
tDCS
TMS
Conditioning Extinction
Phelps

The Arts

Philosophy

Biology

Neurophilosophy

NOT YET ALLOCATED

Improves Learning?

Crncec R, Wilson SJ, Prior M. (2006). The cognitive and academic benefits of music to children: Facts and fictions. Educational Psychology, 26, 579-594.

Could we use TMS or similar to EMULATE the effects of music in learning???????
Improves wellbeing
Enhances learning AND VICE VERSA
Has an evolutionary Origin (IS AN ADAPTATION like learning and social cohesiveness
Improves emotional states
Enhances learning
Creates Social Cohesion
Enhances Learning

Daniel Kahneman Fast Thinking, Slow Thinking

Collette McKay

Corballis

Robert Hester

Rebecca M Jones

Biochemistry

Cognitive Psychology

The Sciences

By

Natural Selection

Cultural Selection

Sexual Selection

Darwinian Evolution

Education

Educational Neuroscience(Science of Learning)

How can neuroscience improve our current understanding - and possibly our practice - of teaching and learning?

Neurology

Research Questions

Positive Educational Neuroscience

Positive Educational Neuroscience RECONCILIATION OF MODELS
Natural Selection drives to SURVIVE and to REPRODUCE

Control (Maslow Reconciliation)

Control (thinkEd Reconciliation)

Geary posits that natural selection created biological adaptations in humans in the form of three innate cogntive capacities: folk physics, biology and psychology. Physics to enable the organism to safely negotiate the physical world, biology to understand prey and predation, and psychology to negotiate relationships and competition from con-specifics.

It could be argued therefore that wellbeing can be defined in these terms: an individuals is said to be enjoying wellbeing if s/he is effectively and with fitness, negotiating those three domains.

It could then be further argued that thinkEd's Wellbeing Schema - which arise from distal explanations from the real world (not theoretically) could be meaningfully aligned with these three adaptations - mutually exhaustively.

In contrast, however, Seligman's PERMA schema fails in two significant ways. Firstly, it provides for the construct of meaning, which is not predicted by evolutionary models. Secondly, engagement does not fall neatly into any of the three categories.

It is concluded therefore that the thinkEd schema lends itself more logically to an evolutionary model.

So what has this to do with education? While positive psychology talks about 'what makes for the good life', positive education talks about 'what can and should we teach?". The conclusion from this analysis is that teaching of wellbeing in a way aligned and consistent with evolutionary biology - a veritable factual schema adopted as certain and predictable as any tenet in science, for example gravity - is likely to be more effective in creating wellbeing, than a schema that is not so predicted by evolutionary biology.

The concepts of engagement and meaning are likely, under an evolutionary model, to have no bearing on an individual's wellbeing levels, subjective or otherwise.

Implication for Education: teach thinkEd's schema, not PERMA, and higher wellbeing scores (dependent variable) will ensue, given that teaching methods and other factors are held constant (independent variables).

Type 1 and Type 2 thinking. Type 1 thinking lends itself to Geary's categorisation, but not to school-learning, whereas Type 2 is more akin to formal, logical school-learning.

Other Species (Folk BIOLOGY)

Spacer

Control (PERMA Reconciliation)

Living world (Folk BIOLOGY)

Physical world (Folk PHYSICS)

Other People (Folk PSYCHOLOGY)

Teaching Wellbeing Explicity
Decrease rates of self-harm?

Mutilation?

Suicide?

Ill-health?

Drug abuse?

Decrease rates of CRIMINALITY?

As a VICTIM?

As a PERPETRATOR?

Masters Project

Teaching Wellbeing to Traumatised Students: A neuroeducational view

Masters Project (10,000 words, semester 2, 2012)

Define the problem space: teachers are ill-equipped to handle "misbehaviour" at any level, but especially ill-equipped to handle trauma behaviour.

Define a positive approach - using neuroscience and possibly positive psychology - that can be applied to the teachers only (not students, averting the need for ethics committees). Assess impact qualitatively.

The literature review and preliminary findings then becomes the introduction to the Ph.D project in the same area.

Review literature

Positive Psychology

Trauma

The RAS filters information, and is the seat of beliefs in a computational (connectionist) neuroscientific sense. When the student has been affected by trauma, the RAS creates a set of beliefs, especially self-beliefs, which steer and restrict learning.

Feedback operates at the PFC level, and cannot override those RAS-based beliefs.

Teaching wellbeing therefore requires over-ride or challenge of those beliefs before effective learning can occur.

Effective teaching of wellbeing to traumatised students requires changing the victim's beliefs about their self-concept.

Feedback is of limited efficacy when teaching wellbeing to traumatised students

Neuroscience LIterature

Foundation House Action Research

SIFR Audit

Qualitatively assess impact by

Assessing students

Interviewing teachers

Define an evidence-based approach and apply
Assess teachers' needs in the area

PhD Project

Naturalistic Taxonomy of Feedback
Role of Praise

Does praise have an effect when it is directed to the student at their current level (Where am I now) such that it improves the relationship with the teacher, but is less effective when it is directed at the intended learning (How am I going?).

Does it improve . . .

Wellbeing teaching in particular?

Teaching in general?

What are the NEURAL CORRELATES?
Can TMS enhance the effects of feedback in learning?

Assume that beliefs occur in the Reticular Activation System in the hindbrain, and that feedback stimulates higher cortical areas most likely in the PFC. This can be tested using fMRI.

Demonstrate that feedback is less effective with learning that requires changing one's beliefs.

Does stimulation by an external means (TMS for example) of the RAS enhance the effects of feedback in belief-bound learning?

Is feedback ineffective in changing beliefs?

Reconceptualisations

Bridges

Indicated by Folk domains, learning by modelling.

Geary 2008
Sarah Jayne Blackmore
Van Den Bos
Mindfulness

Contrast Eastern religious or mystical approaches to meditation.

Similarly, contrast mindfulness and meditation: focus on a single point while remaining motionless and emptying the mind, c.f. aligning one's cognitive behaviours with the way the brain has evolved: with constant attentiveness to change and novelty.

Whither metacognition then?

Is mindfulness' effectiveness a result of its enhancement of SELF feedback?
Can mindfulness training improve wellbeing of traumatised students?

Measure after

Measure before

Select cohort:

Neural Correlates
Subtopic
Ellen Langer (Harvard)

Effects on Wellbeing

Effects on Learning

Mindfulness Neuroscience

Mindful Awareness

Reflection
Metacognition
Self-directed Feedback
Prediction

Learning is the adaptive alteration of connections between neurons.

The capacity to learn is a biological adaptation which affords the individual organism with advantages over other species and con-specifics relating to survival and reproduction.

Environmental Factors
Culture
Home Environment

Parenting

Pedagogy

Modelling

Direct Instruction

Storytelling

Jonathan Gottschall THE STORYTELLING ANIMAL

Neurological factors
DNA

Epigenetic

Genetic

Cortical organisation
Schwann Cells
Synaptic Pruning
Myelination
Neurogenesis
Synaptogenesis
Cell death
Synaptic weighting

Emotions in Learning

Immordino-Yang

Darwinian Adaptations

Music

Music enhances social cohesion.

Social cohesion enhances biological fitness and assumedly psychological wellbeing.

Learning is a biological adaptation.

Music is a biological adaptation.

Social cohesiveness is a biological adaptation.

Social cohesiveness enhances learning.

So why not incorporate music into learning strategies (not just another contiguous subject in the curriculum).

Kirschner & Tomasello
Peretz
Sarkamo
Social Cohesiveness
Learning

Natue has selected both learning and social cohesiveness. But why is learning so much better when people are socially connected / cohesive?

Brainwaves as Feedback Mechanism

Nature Neuroscience

Evolutionary Educational Neuroscience

Medina

Geary

Folk Biology

Folk Physics

Folk Psychology

Longterm Potentiation

Hebb, Gazzaniga

Wellbeing
GRIT

A similar construct to resiilence (enhanced by CBT/RET, PPP optimism and general communication, soial and emotional interventions) but with a specific focus: the prepareness to fail.

The very antithesis of this is the Positive Pscych concept of playing to one's strengths, and thereby becoming more engaged (better adapted?) and ultimately more successful - having achieved "positive accomplishment". This is supported by Geary's theory that the primary drive of evolutionary adaptation is to exerrt CONTROL over one's environment (folk PHYSICS), one's competing species (folk BIOLOGY) and one's con-specifics (folk PSYCHOLOGY) - the primary objective, encoded in our cognitive structures, is to succeed in our environment (in a biological sense - i.e. to survive and replicate).

But the very word 'fail' may well some unintended 'spandrel-like' negative consequences. If the derogatory nature of thew word fail has emotional byproduct of making the person less likely to try (fear of failure) anxiety at social perception) then an alternative label may enhance both learning adn wellbeing: learning because trying new and more challenging activities expands one's horizons and affords more olpportunites for correcive feedback which Hattie shows is more powerful tfor learning than confirmatory feedback; and wellbeing because the studnt will (i0 avoid teh negative emotions normally associated with failure, including the approbation of peers, and (ii0 benefit from better academic outcomes whaich are also causally assoiciated with adult wellbeing (REF from Dr Nazi).

A possible impediment to 'grit as the preparedness to fail' is the socialisation 9familial and cultural) of children to associate failure with disdain. There may well also be gender and ethnic differences here. In any case, if students have learned to associated failure with negativity and avoidance, they are unlikely to embrace oppotrunities to fail even where they afford opportunities to learn.

Thos who assoicate fialrue with negativiety will be less likely to take risks in learning, despite the benefits that such learning might bring.

Donoghue?

Attention

Visual Attention can be split
Neibergall
Reticular Activation System (Cognitive Filtering)

If beliefs are the outcome of reorganisation in the RAS filters, then they will be resistant to change by feedback.

need another intervention that can 'scramble' those filters. NLP, Meditation, Medication, External Stimulation (TMS)

IDEA:

Find a belief that hinders learning.

MRI the RAS during the exercise of a particular belief. Find another exercise (cognitive, talk, whatever) that also activates this area (or even TMS directly onto that area while the exercise is happening). and see if the beliefs become more plastic.

Goswami
Willis

Sense of Self

TBA

Beliefs

Churchland

Feedback

Neural correlates?
Naturalistic Taxonomy

Hattie's questions:

Where am i going?

How am I going?

Where to next?

This definitely works in education (meta-analyses). But why. Is it a re-capitulation of neural activity?

1. goal-directed intention as formulated by cognition (where am I going?) INTENTION (and forward planning and Flight-Simulator areas of the brain)

1a. Taking of the action (MOTOR cortex)

2. Attending to the results of the action (How am I going?) FEEDBACK (reflection, SENSORY cortext)

3. Modifying behaviour in light of feedback (Where to next?) FEEDBACK circuits and MOTOR cortex

Is there a FEEDBACK analysis section of the brain? Does it light up during activity? IF there is, could TMS enhance its effectiveness??????

Does the learning process follow this order:

intention, (

action, (MOTOR CORTEX)

feedback, (SENSORY CORTEX to attend to teh environment and perceive the consequences of one' actions) IS ther e a FEEDBACK centre? or is feedback mediated by brainwave patterns as per Nature Neuroscience article?)

adjustment of actions (MOTOR CORTEX)

Is there a Feedback centre of the brain?

if so, can TMS improve its function and thus enhance learning?

Hattie, Donoghue?
Dweck
Hattie

Numeracy

Butterworth

Literacy

Wolf
Dehaene

Psychology

Educational Psychology

Physics

Maslow

Peak Experiences

Self-Actualization

Psychological Needs

Safety Needs

Survival Needs

NLP

Growth

Contribution

Significance

Love

Uncertainty

Certainty

Good Lives Model

Other People (Folk PSYCHOLOGY)

Other species (Folk BIOLOGY)

Creativity

Pleasure

Spirituality

Community

Relatedness

Inner Peace

Excellence in Agency

Excellence in Work

Excellence in Play

Knowledge

Life

PINK: DRIVE

Purpose

Mastery

Autonomy

The Neurosciences

Main topic