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April 12, 2012
There is more hunger for love and appreciation in this world than for bread.
-Mother Teresa
Exchange today unveiled two new Exchange Essentials on "Implications of Brain Research." In the first of these Essentials, Pam Schiller offers these strategies for early childhood programs to take advantage what we now know about brain development:
- Emotions enhance memory.
Events that are accompanied by intense emotion are more easily recalled.
Use laughter, stories, and music when introducing new information. For example, if you are teaching a lesson on farm animals, start by singing "Old MacDonald Had A Farm."
- The more connections made between new information and existing patterns in the brain, the greater the chances of moving information from working-memory to long-term memory.
Offer many different opportunities for gathering and processing information. For example, when studying zoo animals, you might want to take a field trip, read a book, shape animals from clay, classify the animals, make up zoo stories, and so on. You get the picture.
- Novelty can boost memory.
Our bodies release chemicals when under stress. Positive stress increases adrenaline, negative stress increases cortisol. Both chemicals act as memory fixatives. Novelty creates positive stress, because when a situation is different from existing patterns the learner is challenged.
Teach a lesson outside. Switch places with another teacher one day. Work puzzles upside down. Change your room arrangement. A typical preschool classroom is a good example of novelty because we change activities frequently.
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Exchange has published over 2,300 articles. We have selected the most popular of these articles and organized them by topic into inexpensive ($1 per article) digital collections that you can download to your desktop for immediate use. You'll find that Exchange Essentials are the perfect platform for staff development and training sessions that deliver the essential, critical information staff and students need. Enjoy!
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Comments (1)
Displaying 1 CommentHosanna House
Wilkinsburg, PA, United States
I completely agree that emotions enhance memory. Being a Pre-K teacher, I always have to find ways to keep learning fun. When I introduce a new topic, I like to show the children photos and ask for predictions, read stories that go with the theme, sing new songs or even show an appropriate clip from sites like youtube.com. Each day is an adventure. The more we introduce new and fun ways of learning and build on what the children know, the more developed their memory will become.
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