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Brain-based Learning in the Virtual Classroom

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Brain-based Learning in the Virtual Classroom

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This 60-minute webinar introduced six brain-based learning principles to create novelty, contrast, meaning, and emotion in the virtual classroom

This 60-minute webinar introduced six brain-based learning principles to create novelty, contrast, meaning, and emotion in the virtual classroom

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Brain-based Learning in the Virtual Classroom

  1. 1. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 1 Brain-based Learning in the Virtual Classroom March 15, 2017
  2. 2. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 2 Webinar Objectives • Apply six brain-based guidelines in your next web workshop • Increase novelty, contrast, meaning, and emotion in the virtual classroom • Take away an infographic to reinforce brain-based learning approaches
  3. 3. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 3 Tweet #virtuallearning #NSLSlive
  4. 4. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 4 Purpose Poll What do you hope to gain from participating in this webinar?
  5. 5. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 5 Neuroplasticity • Our brains are constantly growing and changing. • Learning changes the wiring of the brain.
  6. 6. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 6 Brain-based Learning
  7. 7. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 7 Brain-based Learning Active engagement = active brains
  8. 8. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 8 Brain-based Guideline #1 Active engagement = active brains
  9. 9. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 9 Rate your Engagement How would you rate your ability to actively engage your learners in the virtual classroom?
  10. 10. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 10 Example
  11. 11. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 11 Example
  12. 12. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 12 Example
  13. 13. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 13 Example
  14. 14. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 14 Example
  15. 15. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 15 Brain-based Learning Active engagement = active brains Neurons that fire together wire together
  16. 16. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 16 Brain-based Guideline #2 Neurons that fire together wire together.
  17. 17. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 17 Tell Me More Neurons that fire together wire together. What does this brain-based guideline tell us about the way people learn in the virtual classroom?
  18. 18. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 18 Neurons Firing Together • Increase multi-modal sensory learning • Create context • Begin with what the learner already knows • Use stories and metaphors
  19. 19. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 19 How does this story demonstrate the brain-based guideline, “Neurons that fire together wire together?” Neurons Firing Together
  20. 20. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 20 How does this story demonstrate the brain-based guideline, “Neurons that fire together wire together?” Neurons Firing Together
  21. 21. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 21 Quiz • Multi-modal sensory learning aids memory and recall. • New information must have context. • Learning begins with what the learner already knows. • Moderate stress is required for learning. • Stories and metaphors help learners make connections. Which element is not related to the brain-based guideline “Neurons that fire together wire together.”
  22. 22. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 22 Brain-based Learning Active engagement = active brains Neurons that fire together wire together Vision trumps all other senses
  23. 23. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 23 Vision trumps all other senses. Brain-based Guideline #3 If you understand that “Vision trumps all other senses,” what will you do in the virtual classroom?
  24. 24. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 24 This is a visual medium
  25. 25. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 25 Marine Debris • There are 5.25 trillion pieces of plastic debris in the ocean. • 269,000 tons of plastic float on the surface. • 100,000 marine creatures a year die from plastic entanglement. • 1 million seabirds die each year
  26. 26. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 26 5.25 trillion pieces of plastic debris
  27. 27. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 27 Brain-based Learning Active engagement = active brains Neurons that fire together wire together Vision trumps all other senses Social learning fires mirror neurons
  28. 28. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 28 Brain-based Guideline #4 Social learning fires mirror neurons.
  29. 29. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 29 Social Learning “People learn from one another, sometimes without even realizing that they are doing so. With the increasing shift from face-to-face meetings and events to virtual and digital formats, careful thought must be given to how we build human interaction into learning solutions.” The Maritz Institute
  30. 30. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 30 Emotions “There can be no knowledge without emotion….To the cognition of the brain must be added the experience of the soul.” Arnold Bennett
  31. 31. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 31 Implications What are the implications of this brain-based guideline (Social learning fires mirror neurons) in the virtual classroom?
  32. 32. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 32 • Stimulate emotional engagement • Use visuals, stories, novelty and humor • Encourage social collaboration, practice and application • Exhibit positive energy and enthusiasm • Avoid negatively charged emotional states Implications
  33. 33. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 33 Leadership Example
  34. 34. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 34 What was your emotional response to watching this video? What leadership qualities are demonstrated? Example
  35. 35. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 35 Brain-based Learning Active engagement = active brains Neurons that fire together wire together Vision trumps all other senses Social learning fires mirror neurons No pain – No gain
  36. 36. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 36 Brain-based Guideline #5 Failure precedes success.
  37. 37. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 37 Goldilocks Rule
  38. 38. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 38 What are the implications of this brain-based rule in our virtual classroom designs? No Pain. No Gain.
  39. 39. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 39 Brain-based Learning Active engagement = active brains Neurons that fire together wire together Vision trumps all other senses Social learning fires mirror neurons No pain – No gain Practice makes permanent
  40. 40. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 40 Practice makes permanent. Brain-based Guideline #6
  41. 41. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 41 Delegating Example
  42. 42. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 42 Example
  43. 43. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 43 Example
  44. 44. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 44 1. Review steps 2. Model or demonstrate 3. Have participants reflect 4. Apply (practice) 5. Observe and share feedback 6. Use on the job 7. Report results to peers Practice Makes Permanent
  45. 45. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 45 Brain-based Learning Active engagement = active brains Neurons that fire together wire together Vision trumps all other senses Social learning fires mirror neurons No pain – No gain Practice makes permanent
  46. 46. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 46 Taking Action What Insights or Actions will you take from this webinar today?
  47. 47. © 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. 47 Virtual Facilitator Training • Deep dive, comprehensive course • Focused on virtual design and delivery • Public courses offered six times/year • Customized for private delivery in your web conference platform
  48. 48. 48© 2017 NetSpeed Learning Solutions. All rights reserved. • Links to download our eBook and a new infographic • Use the discount code from the eBook to receive $345 off the May Virtual Facilitator course Take Our Survey
  49. 49. 49 Thank You!

Editor's Notes

  • What does this brain-based guideline tell us about the way people learn in the virtual classroom?

    Multi-modal sensory learning aids memory
    New information must have context
    Learning begins with what the learner already knows
    Stories, analogies and metaphors help learners make connections
    All of the above
  • What does this brain-based guideline tell us about the way people learn in the virtual classroom?

    Multi-modal sensory learning aids memory and recall.
    New information must have context.
    Learning begins with what the learner already knows
    Stories, analogies and metaphors help learners make connections
    All of the above
  • This story demonstrates one aspect of the brain guideline: Neurons that Fire Together Wire Together.

    A teacher was trying to help her students learn to read aloud effectively. She explained that one should pause at a comma, come to a full stop at a period, and sound emphatic when an exclamation mark appeared at the end of a sentence. Despite her explanations, her students continued to race through their reading with few pauses, full stops, or emphasis. Finally, exasperated, she had them put on their coats and take their reading outside. There she had them walk while they read. She told them to pause and physically slow down when they came to a comma. They had them stop dead in their tracks when they came to a period. She had them jump up and down when they hit an exclamation point. After 15 minutes of practice, she brought the students back inside. From that day forward, they remembered to pause at commas, stop at periods, and emphasize sentences with exclamation marks.
  • One more story: Two years ago, I took my two teenaged daughters to Washington, D.C. and Williamsburg. I dragged them to national monuments, national parks, museums, Civil War battlefields, and Civil War cemeteries. We visited the monument for General George Pickett, an ancestor on my mother’s side, who fought for the south in the Civil War. These are Grayce and Jessica’s feet at the site of the Lincoln Memorial where Martin Luther King, Jr. gave his famous, “I Have a Dream” speech. To say that my teenagers were reluctant tourists is an understatement. I listened to a lot of complaining. So imagine my delight when my older daughter Grayce called me this past week with excitement in her voice, “Mom, we’re studying the Civil War in American History! I’ve been to all of the places we’re talking about! There are pictures of the Lincoln Memorial in our textbook! I’ve been there! I’m reading about General Pickett! This is so cool! Now I know why you wanted us to see those monuments and battle fields! I told my teacher that my family is related to General Pickett.”
  • Neurons that Fire Together Wire Together

    Multi-modal sensory learning aids memory and recall.
    New information must have context.
    Learning begins with what the learner already knows.
    Stories and metaphors help learners make connections.
  • The notion of mirror neurons was first observed by scientists studying monkeys. Scientists now think that humans as babies begin to recognize social behavior within the first hour of life, trying to match gestures and mirroring facial expressions. The mirror neuron system plays a part in our ability to imitate others, speak a language, feel and show empathy, and understand the behavior of others.

  • Arnold Bennett was an English playwright and novelist who wrote in the late 1800’s.

    Mirror neurons and emotions are strong connected. Where we once thought that the brain understood and interpreted the behavior and actions of others through logical thought, scientists now believe that we understand, not through thinking but through feeling.
  • These are all ways to capture and keep attention so that people aren’t tempted to multi-task.
  • Derek Redmond at the Barcelona Olympics in 1992.
  • Another way to say this is “Failure precedes success.” Now the interesting thing about this brain-based guideline is that you want to support each learner’s competence, confidence, and ability to learn while at the same time creating a safe space to fail and learn from that failure.
  • Not too much stress (or we trigger negative emotions and shut down learning)
    Not too little stress (or people get bored and start multi-tasking)
    But just the right amount of discomfort (so we engage interest and attention)
  • Practice creates new neural pathways, eventually creating “shortcuts” to answers. The trick is that we first must practice the right things and we must receive feedback so we can adjust and improve.

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