Browsing by Author "Hale, James B."
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- PublicationOpen AccessBrain literacy empowers educators to meet diverse learner needs(Taylor & Francis, 2019)
;Walker, Zachary ;Hale, James B. ;Chen, Annabel Shen-HsingThe potential of educational neuroscience in teacher training and continuing professional development has been debated extensively, yet knowledge translation is largely absent in this field. Without objective methods for translating and disseminating educational neuroscience evidence, the impact of training on educators and the children they serve will remain limited. This position paper addresses this critical teacher education need by providing a rationale for why brain literacy training is vital as teachers learn to meet the needs of diverse learners. The authors offer three important factors for consideration regarding the utility of educational neuroscience for educators and allied school practitioners. First, the foundations and history of professional educator development in educational neuroscience will be considered. Second, a brief review of the empirical learning science literature within the context of science-based education will be considered. Third, a rationale for including a more intensive brain literacy training for educators is provided by comparing the impact traditional teaching practices and brain literate strategies have on curriculum and instruction, and how standard practices may actually undermine student brain development. Finally, three recommendations for developing educator brain literacy are offered to guide future policy, research, and practice decisions.167 226Scopus© Citations 11 - PublicationMetadata onlyBrain literacy empowers educators to meet diverse learner needs(National Institute of Education (Singapore), 2017)
;Walker, Zachary ;Chen, Annabel Shen-Hsing; Hale, James B.This working paper addresses the potential of educational neuroscience in educator training and continuing professional development. The authors offer four critical factors regarding the utility of educational neuroscience for educators. First, the foundations and history of professional educator development in educational neuroscience are considered. Second, a review of existing teacher educator training programs purported to represent neuroscience approaches is considered. Third, a review of the empirical learning science literature is considered. Fourth, a rationale for including more intensive brain literacy training for educators is provided by comparing the impact standard teaching practices and brain literate teaching practices have on children. Finally, five recommendations for the development of brain literacy in Singapore are offered for administrators and policymakers to guide future policy and practice decisions.472 9Scopus© Citations 11 - PublicationRestrictedDeveloping a translating educational neuroscience Clearinghouse for the differentiated instruction of diverse learners(Office of Education Research, National Institute of Education, Singapore, 2024)
; ;Chen, Annabel Shen-Hsing; ; ;Walker, ZacharyHale, James B.With increasing interest in the possible contributions of neuroscience research to educational practice, the field of ‘educational neuroscience’ has emerged. Educational neuroscience (also known as ‘mind, brain, and education’ or ‘neuroeducation’) integrates the disciplines of neuroscience, cognitive psychology, and education, and it seeks to study the relationship between the brain, mental processes, and behaviours using a combination of neuroscience and behavioural methods (Szűcs & Goswami, 2007). Neuroscience and behavioural data can inform our understanding of learning and can therefore inform educational practice (Howard-Jones et al., 2016). Some examples are: neuroscience data alongside behavioural data constrain psychological theories (Gabrieli, 2016), neuroscience provides new insights into the learning processes (De Smedt, 2018), and neuroscience leads to the development of new instructions (Howard-Jones et al., 2016). However, challenges exist in applying theoretical knowledge from neuroscience research to inform educational practice in order to impact classroom outcomes in the real world (Bowers, 2016a, 2016b; De Smedt, 2018; Thomas, Ansari, & Knowland, 2019).
A major challenge in applying neuroscience research to inform educational practice is that there is a gap between the study of how the brain works and the practice in classroom, i.e., the neuroscience-education gap. Neuroscientists understand the relationship between brain and behaviour, but they have little knowledge about classroom instruction; educators understand classroom instruction, but they have little knowledge about the relationship between brain and behaviour (Ansari, De Smedt, & Grabner, 2012). The different languages used in the fields of neuroscience and education make the communication between the two fields and the understanding of each other difficult. Misinterpretations can occur when neuroscientists who have little knowledge about classroom instruction turn an experimental task into a classroom intervention or when educators who have little knowledge about the relationship between brain and behaviour over-interpret brain imaging findings (De Smedt, 2018). As a result, efforts to translate neuroscience research into meaningful educational practice have been quite limited.
Bridges can be built at multiple levels to bring the neuroscience-education gap closer, and one way of applying neuroscience research to inform educational practice is by developing educator brain literacy (Ansari & Coch, 2006). Brain literacy is the understanding of the relationship between brain and behaviour; developing educator brain literacy is helping educators understand how the brain learns. The rationale for developing educator brain literacy is: (1) the brain is constantly changing in response to the environment (e.g., Dubinsky, Roehrig, & Varma, 2013); (2) cognitive diversity is the norm (i.e., there are individual differences in the ability to learn) for all children (e.g., Hale, Fiorello, Kavanagh, Holdnack, & Aloe, 2007); and (3) designing instruction based on the understanding of cognitive diversity maximises a student’s learning and potentially prevents learning difficulties from developing into a lifelong disability (e.g., Koziol, Budding, & Hale, 2013).
Given that teaching changes the brain, brain literacy is potentially very useful for educators (Walker, Chen, Poon, & Hale, 2017). First, brain literacy can sensitise educators to individual differences in the ability to learn, which can help them differentiate instruction to meet the needs of diverse learners (e.g., Tomlinson, 2014). Specifically, brain literacy can help educators develop the skills to serve all students by recognising the impact of individual differences in the ability to learn on their instructional processes and student outcomes. Brain literate educators are more likely to understand and meet the diverse learning needs of students by recognising the signs and symptoms exhibited by students and applying alternative instructional strategies. Second, brain literacy enables educators to consider both brain and behavioural information when designing curriculum and instruction to improve student outcomes. Considering both brain and behavioural information may be more beneficial compared to considering behavioural information alone (Gabrieli, Ghosh, & Witfield-Gabrieli, 2015). Therefore, acquiring brain literacy has potential to empower teachers to re-evaluate the effects of their practices (Schwartz et al., 2019) in light of newfound neuroscience evidence, which although has yet to be empirically tested, may be beneficial for their students.
13 36 - PublicationOpen AccessDeveloping a translating educational neuroscience clearinghouse for the differentiated instruction of diverse learners.(National Institute of Education (Singapore), 2019)
; ;Chen, Annabel Shen-Hsing; ; ;Walker, ZacharyHale, James B.426 363 - PublicationOpen Access
237 153Scopus© Citations 12 - PublicationOpen AccessFrontal-subcortical circuitry in social attachment and relationships: A cross-sectional fMRI ALE meta-analysis(Elsevier, 2017)
;Lee, Shi-Hui ;Walker, Zachary ;Hale, James B.Chen, Annabel Shen-HsingResearchers have explored the concept of attachment in multiple ways, from animal studies examining imprinting to abnormal attachment in psychopathology. However, until recently, few have considered how neural circuitry develops the effective social bonds that are subsequently replicated in relationships across the lifespan. This current cross-sectional study undertook a fMRI Activation Likelihood Estimation (ALE) meta-analyses to examine the neurocircuitry that governs emotional and behavioural functions critical for building effective social relationships in children and adults. Results suggest that dissociable dorsal cognitive (“cool”) and ventral - affective (“hot”) frontal-subcortical circuits (FSC) work together to govern social relationships, with repeated social consequences leading to potentially adaptive – or maladaptive – relationships that can become routinized in the cerebellum. Implications for forming stable, functional, social bonds are considered, followed by recommendations for those who struggle with cool and hot FSC functioning that can hinder the development of adaptive prosocial relationships.WOS© Citations 7 106 237Scopus© Citations 10