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03/09/2018

No emotions, no learning (and no teaching)…





Our brain is an extraordinary learning machine.




We could define learning as the addition of new information to the existing one; it happens by activating the construction of new neural networks that functionally link up with those already existing.

Our brain constantly make thousands of postulations trough thousands of connections with other neurons. When the postulations are overturned, new postulations replace the former ones. This constant repetition inside our brains is called Neuroplasticity.

Our brain is an extraordinary learning machine.

Memory permits to store information and then recalled it as needed. The more we activate connections, the more often they will be strengthened, constituting long-term memory, while those that are not will be weakened.

Teachers teach better and students learn better, when they both know how their brains work: they need to know they have the ability to restructure their brains to become superior teachers and learners at any point in time. For these purposes, emotions are key.

In schools all over the world, we have millions of teachers and students with their emotions faded. Their brain is overwhelmed by anxiety, fear, anger, boredom, tiredness. Teachers have to support their students’ social and emotional needs before dwelling upon academic learning. Nevertheless, before of that, educators have to be trained and provided with adequate tools that create emotional adjustments and empathy for themselves and their students.

1. Focus

The truth is that humans are not good at multi-tasking. Experiments have depicted that it is very difficult for our brains to pay attention to more than an item at a time. Attention and focus are the filtering mechanisms that allow us to select information and to adjust processing.

2. Active Engagement

Research has proven that our brains do not learn passively. We learn by doing, therefore we should practice Active Listening (Teachers) and Active Learning (Students).

3. Immediate Feedback

Our brain is continuously making predictions and adjusting projections, depending on the feedback it receives. Feedback is therefore necessary for brain to process and readjust to learning, depending on the positive or negative feedback received. Trial and error are essential for learning and there should be no stress linked to making mistakes as this inhibits learning.

4. Associations

When we learn something new, our prefrontal cortex put together our entire asset to achieve this learning. When we duplicate this task repeatedly, the learning progressively becomes faster, more efficient, frees up gaps for new learning.

5. Sleep

Sleep is extremely crucial. During sleep, the algorithms of our brains reiterate everything learnt during the day, encoding new hypotheses for the next day that boost our life-long journey of teaching and learning.


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