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Brain-Friendly Classrooms
Skills for Life
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We Have Brain-Friendly Classrooms
Weve got friendly people and user-friendly computers. And, now, weve also got brain-friendly classrooms.
Soft-light lamps. Wall charts with learning concepts. Overstuffed reading chairs. Real-life objects in work centers. And lots of plants.
These are more than gimmicks to make students feel comfortable. They are proven ways to increase students interest and abilities to learn. They also are practices in what is known as Concept-Based Brain Compatible (CBBC) Classrooms in the Davenport Community Schools.
Brain-Friendly is another way of referring to these classrooms, which appear and feel different from traditional classrooms. They provide the nurturing kind of environment in which students brains are able to work better.
Based in research on how the brain works, this new teaching approach includes the following eight components:
- Absence of Threat with teachers helping to alleviate threats or anxiety by making daily schedules and expectations clear and emphasizing the districts
Skills for Life
- Collaboration involving community building between students
- Enriched Environment including plants, lamps, hands-on activities, and community guest speakers
- Adequate Time providing students with the time necessary to discover patterns and connections in what they are learning
- Choice allowing students to select how they learn, when possible
- Meaningful Content presented at a difficulty level that matches the students age levels and is relevant to their world beyond school
- Immediate Feedback so students continually know where they stand in order to make improvements
- Mastery of Student Learning demonstrated in a variety of ways that allow students to see their progress
What Does a ‘Brain-Compatible’ Classroom Look
Like?: Instructional Strategies
Absence of Threat
- Daily Agendas: schedule (expectations) for the day
posted where students can see it easily
- Lifelong Guidelines: Be Truthful, Be Trustworthy, No
Put Downs, Active Listening, Personal Best
- Procedures: steps for completing a task – the plan
for expected behavior
- Consistency: expectations maintained through
procedures, agendas, modeling, and consequences
- Target Talk: a non-threatening way to focus attention
on a concept or behavior
- Davenport’s Seven Skills: caring, teamwork,
responsibility, effort, initiative, perseverance, common sense
- Brain Biology: teaching how the brain functions
Collaboration
- Cooperative Groups: working together to complete a
task
- Class Meetings: time to "talk it out" and
discuss issues and resolve problems
- Community Building: helping each student become a
contributing part of his or her class
Enriched Environment
- "Being There" Experiences: real world
location that uses all the learner’s senses
- Clutter-Free Environment: classrooms that avoid
distraction and overstimulation and are clean and well organized
- Morning Procedure: a procedure that sets the stage
for the student to begin his or her own work (the day begins with
student, not teacher)
- Immersion in Content: creating a time and place
within the classroom that reflects what is being studied – not just
print resources, but also three-dimension objects and artifacts
- Compatible Colors: greens and blues tend to be
calming and shades of brown reassuring; bright psychedelic colors are
avoided
- Hands-On Activities: artifacts, manipulatives,
"real" objects
- Emotional Hooks: ways of bringing in interest and
experiences of the students; emotion drives attention, which drives
learning
- Resource Books and People: original documents, guests
from a particular field of study
- Music, Lamps, Plants, Potpourri: an environment
conducive to learning
Immediate Feedback
- Guided Practice: teacher provides sufficient examples
and practice for student achievement
- Rubric: a scoring guide that gives the child the
expectations and a vehicle for self-feedback
- Student Binders: binders for self-checking progress
and understanding
- Checking for Understanding: teacher monitors through
observation, informal assessment, and every-pupil response techniques
Meaningful Content
- Application to the Real World: constantly helping
students connect what is being learned to how it will be used in the
world beyond school
- Curriculum Connections: concepts that can be applied
to other subject areas
- Student Binders: notebooks or folders for each
student that contain copies of procedures, work-in-progress, Seven
Skills, Lifelong Guidelines, classroom information, expectations
- C.U.E.: design content that is creative, useful, and
emotional
- Age Appropriate Content: content that is meaningful
and of interest to the learner
- Critical Content: facts; what instructors want
students to know and when they’re going to do with it
- Theme: a framework for organizing the curriculum; a
cognitive structure
Choice/Multiple Intelligences
- Learning Activities: activities designed to help
students build mental programs
- Eight Intelligences: linguistic,
logical-mathematical, spatial-visual, musical-rhythmic, naturalist,
intrapersonal, interpersonal, bodily-kinesthetic
- Time: giving students some choice in how to organize
their time
- Science Behaviors: observing, comparing, organizing,
applying, and communicating
- Learning Styles: visual, auditory, tactile,
kinesthetic
- Bloom’s Taxonomy:
knowledge->comprehension->application->analysis->evaluation->synthesis
Adequate Time
- Pattern Recognition: helping students see patterns in
the world, across subject areas and in content and process skills –
concepts and generalizations
- Building Mental Programs: being able to do a sequence
of steps to accomplish a goal
- Less Is Best: developing content and topics to the
concept level; not skimming over the curriculum
Mastery
- Student Portfolio: demonstrates growth, polished
pieces, personal best
- Metacognition: teaching students how to think about
their thinking
- 3C’s of Assessment: complete, correct, and
comprehensive
- Authentic Assessment: tasks are related to classroom
instruction and connected to the world beyond the classroom
- Closures (celebration): students teaching parents or
other adults what they’ve learned as a result of a unit of study
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