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Immordino-Yang, Mary Helen; Knecht, Douglas R. – Educational Leadership, 2020
Human beings construct narratives about the world and their experiences in it--whether in math class or at the dinner table, people tell themselves stories about who they and others are, how the world works and why. Among teenagers, these meaning-making narratives are related to the activity and changing connectivity of the networks in their…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Development, Adolescent Development, Brain
Gabrieli, John – Educational Leadership, 2020
New brain imaging methods are helping us better understand how children learn, writes neuroscientist John Gabrieli. But "education neuroscience" has become the source of both promise and debate.
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Diagnostic Tests, Neurosciences, Learning Processes
Brown, Seth; Feller, Thomas, Jr. – Educational Leadership, 2022
Self-directed student learning begins with self-directed educators. Teachers in Greenville, North Carolina, are training in the Habits of Mind, a series of thinking behaviors that support self-directed learning by helping students successfully tackle complex problems. The authors outline key instructional strategies that have grown from these…
Descriptors: Independent Study, Self Management, Student Behavior, Teacher Education
Conyers, Marcus; Wilson, Donna – Educational Leadership, 2020
If students are explicitly taught about their brain's capacity to change, their motivation to learn can greatly increase. Marcus Conyers and Donna Wilson, author of "Developing Growth Mindsets," share examples from elementary to high school classrooms where students who are taught about brain plasticity show a greater potential for…
Descriptors: Brain, Cognitive Development, Learning Motivation, Elementary School Students
Kolb, Liz – Educational Leadership, 2019
Many school leaders feel pressure to encourage teachers to integrate technology, yet they do not have a strong conceptual framework of how technology should be integrated. Kolb offers up her open-source Triple E Framework, a tool that helps administrators ask smart questions about how technology is being integrated into learning. Three key…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Technology Uses in Education, Technology Integration, Teaching Methods
Nisbett, Richard E. – Educational Leadership, 2016
You read in the paper this morning that people who take multivitamins have fewer heart attacks and are less likely to get cancer than people who don't. Does this information make you more likely to want to take multivitamins? To truly prepare students for life, schools need to teach them the critical thinking skills they need to answer questions…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Thinking Skills, Teaching Methods, Problem Solving
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Conley, David T. – Educational Leadership, 2011
The Common Core State Standards, released in June 2010, offer an opportunity to shift education away from shallow, test-prep instruction and toward a focus on key cognitive skills, writes Conley. Two consortia of states are now developing common assessments to measure these standards--assessments that will be designed to capture deeper, more…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, State Standards, Thinking Skills, Educational Needs
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Jensen, Eric – Educational Leadership, 2013
"Poverty" is an uncomfortable word. Teachers are often unsure what to expect from kids from low-income households and what to do differently as a result. Well-known author and educator Eric Jensen points to seven differences that show up in school between low- and middle-income children. By understanding what they are and how to address…
Descriptors: Poverty, Classroom Environment, Learner Engagement, Low Income Groups
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Levine, Mel – Educational Leadership, 2007
The author describes four capacities--interpretation, instrumentation, interaction, and inner direction--that are as important as traditional academic subjects in preparing young adults for college and career success. He suggests how high schools should address each of these capacities. For example, to develop students' capacity for inner…
Descriptors: Student Development, Cognitive Development, Behavioral Objectives, Creative Development
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Noddings, Nel – Educational Leadership, 2008
Critical thinking is the sort of mental activity that uses facts to plan, order, and work toward an end; seeks meaning or an explanation; is self-reflective; and uses reason to question claims and make judgments. Any subject--be it physics, algebra, or auto repair--can promote critical thinking as long as teachers teach the subject matter in…
Descriptors: Lifelong Learning, Critical Thinking, Vocational Education, Education Work Relationship
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Perkins-Gough, Deborah – Educational Leadership, 2007
During a career spanning five decades, Edward Zigler has combined scholarly research with public service to promote national and state policies that are good for all children. Often called "the father of Head Start," he served on the planning committee for the program in 1965 and became the first director of the Office of Child…
Descriptors: Disadvantaged Youth, School Readiness, Cognitive Development, Child Development
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Bodrova, Elena; Leong, Deborah J. – Educational Leadership, 2005
Early childhood education must bolster basic cognitive and social-emotional competencies to prepare children for authentic learning. The preschool educators should view academic skills and concepts as valuable tools in the process of developing essential competencies.
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Cognitive Development, Social Development, Emotional Development
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Price, Lisa F. – Educational Leadership, 2005
Neuroscience and developmental psychology can give useful insight into adolescent behavior that is believed to be the result of the interplay between body chemistry, brain development and cognitive growth. The new findings offer guidance to educators on how to channel adolescent energy into healthy directions.
Descriptors: Developmental Psychology, Brain, Adolescents, Adolescent Development
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Brandt, Ron – Educational Leadership, 2000
Sylwester says education must begin relying more on biology than social and behavioral science. All brain systems move from a slow, awkward functional level to a fast, efficient level. Contributions of metacognition, self-regulation, emotions, reflective and reflexive responses, comparison, and classification to cognitive development are…
Descriptors: Biology, Brain, Child Development, Classification
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Fonzi, Marie A. – Educational Leadership, 1982
Fred Wood and Steven Thompson claim that inservice educational practices should be changed because, first, more adults are operating at a lower stage of cognitive development than previously believed, and, second, adults prefer learning in informal social situations. This article challenges the adequacy of the research analysis underlying these…
Descriptors: Adult Learning, Cognitive Development, Educational Research, Experiential Learning
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