How Girls Learn: Putting Research to Work Center for Research on Girls (CRG) at Laurel School.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Truth About Ability and Accomplishment
Advertisements

Stay Motivated 2012 Angela Dierks
BRAIN TRAINING: THE NEW SCIENCE OF INTELLIGENCE LAUREL SCHOOL | ONE LYMAN CIRCLE SHAKER HEIGHTS, OHIO
Why So Few? Women in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics.
LARRY GOODMAN, PH.D Director of Strategic Programming; Co-Director of The Center for Research on Girls, Laurel School LICIA KOVACH Science Department Chair,
Developing Confident Individuals. Learners meet very challenging targets and almost all make good or excellent progress as reflected in contextual value.
NO PAIN, NO GAIN… IT’S TIME TO GROW YOUR BRAIN! PART 1.
Does Mindset Matter?
Mindset the new psychology of success How we can learn to fulfill our potential Carol S. Dweck, Ph.D.
Mindsets: Helping Our Children Reach Their Potential.
Intellectual Development in Infants
Mr. McNamara Ms. Talento Mr. Romanelli. Are people born SMART….?
BRAIN TRAINING: THE NEW SCIENCE OF INTELLIGENCE Science, Day 4, Friday.
1. 2 Beliefs people hold about their most basic qualities and abilities.
Silent Launch Expectations This activity should be… Silent Independent Work until I say stop Be ready to share your answersExpectations This activity should.

LEARNING AND THE TEENAGE BRAIN
“Motivating every Student to Learn by fostering a Growth Mindset”.
Gender Equity in Computing Rita M. Powell Department Manager Dept. of Computer & Information Science.
Gender Bias & What Can We Do Today? Pamela Androff April 15, 2011.
An Experimental Scientific Inquiry. Research Overview & Introduction Copyright © Mindset Works, LLC. All rights reserved
Welcome to Thinking Maps ® 1. What are Thinking Maps & why do they work? What is the purpose of each map?What is the Memorial High School Thinking Maps.
Calm, Alert, and Ready to Learn
Workshop Overview Examining the following through a Mindset lens: Day 1 – Classroom Norms and Messaging Day 2 – Grouping Day 3 – Tasks Day 4– Assessment.
What’s Your Mindset? Believing You Can Improve through Practice, Perseverance, and Perspective.
Ability Beliefs By MR LIGHTMAN,freedigitalphotos.netMR LIGHTMAN.
A Bit of Brain Research: Teaching, Learning, & Intelligence Part 1: The Role Classroom Environment Plays in Learning Mathematics.
Stereotypes & Stereotype Threat Affect Computing Students National Center for Women & Information technology (NCWIT), J. Mcgrath Cohoon & the Academic.
Gender & Computing Why Actively Recruit Girls to CS? Joanne McGrath Cohoon UVA Associate Professor NCWIT Senior Research Scientist Michigan Tapestry Workshop.
© 2015 Lumity Get to Know Your Brain. © 2015 Lumity Review ■What did we talk about in our last class? ■What are the 5 primary emotions? ■What is the purpose.
Lesson 11: Why the Brain is Like a Muscle. What is something that you used to not be good at, but now you are? –Write a few sentences on your own. How.
How Kinesthetic Learning Improves Student Understanding
Asian mindsets Dr Rob Waring. North East Asia Two basic mindsets – ‘fixed mindset’ and ‘growth mindset’ Fixed mindset – Adults and children – Very common.
Chapter 1 The Physical Foundation of Behavior. © Copyright 2009 Delmar, Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved.2 The Influence of DNA DNA: complex set.
Time for The Big Think David V. Loertscher & Carol Koechlin.
Positive Mindsets..
The Power of Yet How can developing a Growth Mindset help children to fulfil their potential.
Aims To introduce the concept of Growth and Fixed Mindset and how this can help enable success Consider the presentation of learners with each type of.
GROWTH MINDSET Nurturing Better Learners. In your groups, come up with short sentences that sum up your current understanding of the terms “growth mindset”
Why So Few? Women in Science, Technology,
Fostering Deep Learning Bill Reynolds Director, Institute for Faculty Development September 30 & October 7, 2015.
STEM TEACHING GROUP WORKSHOP MARCH 5, 2015 Creating Inclusive Courses: Practical Approaches that Advance Learning in STEM Courses Angela Linse, Ph.D. Exec.
Pupil Support Worker Conference 22 nd January 2016 Mindsets Lesley Williams and Laura Clark Educational Psychology Service.
Motivation, Teaching, and Learning Pertemuan 10 Matakuliah: E Psikologi Pendidikan Tahun: 2007.
Malleable vs. Fixed Intelligence and the BRAIN Ms. Barracliffe and Ms. Muhammad.
Mindset. A mindset is simply a belief – a belief about yourself and your qualities - ability, personality and talents.
An introduction for parents Jane Williams. To be a lifelong learner there a certain skills and attributes a person needs in order to be a successful lifelong.
Growth Mindsets at Long Crendon The Story So Far Monday 29 th February 2016.
UNIVERSITY COUNSELING CENTER STUDY SKILLS SEMINAR MEMORIAL HALL, FIRST FLOOR Managing Test Distractions and Anxiety.
Growth Mindset Carol Dweck Ph.D Before we begin please take some time to consider your own Mindset through responding to the statements on the sheet.
ESSENTIAL QUESTION: HOW DOES AN INFANT’S BRAIN DEVELOP AND WHAT CAN CAREGIVERS DO TO PROMOTE DEVELOPMENT? Chapter 9: Intellectual Development in Infants.
What is a ?. Are you sitting comfortably? Then I’ll begin….
We don’t see unmotivated babies…
Growing Learners: Parents’ Briefing.
Mindset: The Psychology of Learning and Achievement
Building a Growth Mindset in School Culture
Growth Mindset: Game Changer Brain Changer
Early Brain Development
Growth Mindset Sources: PERTS, Stanford University’s applied research center on academic motivation and Carol Dweck’s book entitled Mindset: The New.
Grow your Intelligence!
Raising student achievement by promoting a Growth Mindset
TAGS: Metacognition, Fixed and Growth Mindsets.
You Can Grow Your Intelligence
We don’t see unmotivated babies…
Mindsets Get out your own piece of paper and a writing device!
We don’t see unmotivated babies…
Stereotype Threat Theory and First-Generation Students:
Growth mindset.
The Mindset for Success AKA How to do great at University
STRENGTHENING YOUR BRAIN LIKE YOU STRENGTHEN YOUR MUSCLES Lesson 2
Presentation transcript:

How Girls Learn: Putting Research to Work Center for Research on Girls (CRG) at Laurel School

CRG’s mission and vision CRG is a bridge between schools and academic research Doctors update their practice based on the latest research results… …teachers should too!

CRG…  Develops progressive educational initiatives and curricula based on cutting- edge academic research  Sponsors original research studies on the development and education of girls  Connects faculty and parents to well- established and highly salient and meaningful research on girls and their education.

CRG:Educational Programming Initiatives: Girls & Mathematics –Primary School: Spatial skills –Middle School: Growth mindset –Upper School: Stereotype threat

Primary School: Spatial Skills What the research shows: –Boys outperform girls on math problems that require spatial skills –Gender differences in spatial skills emerge by first grade –Spatial skills are trainable

Primary School: Spatial Skills In-class activities –Tangrams –Pentominoes Mix-It-Up Day –3-D Construction –Mapping the school Game Hall CRG Rubik’s cubes

Middle School: Growth Mindset What the research shows –Girls are more likely than boys to develop a “fixed mindset” –Girls are more likely than boys to back away from difficult material because of their “fixed mindset” –Students can be trained to develop a “growth mindset” –Doing so increases academic achievement

Middle School:Growth Mindset Brain Training Brain Bowl

Brain Training The new science of intelligence

View from the past We used to think that brains were a lot like skeletal structures: –You’re born with everything you’ll ever have. –No matter what you do, nothing new is added over time.

What we know now Brains are a lot like muscles: –What you’re born with is just a start –What you do makes a big difference in how your muscles and brain grow and develop!

There are four important ways that muscles and brains are alike.

Similarity #1 Muscles and brains have tiny structures that grow and multiply.

Muscles have fibers…. that contract when the muscle is put to work. Your muscles grow as the fibers get bigger new fibers are added.

Brains have neurons… that are activated when the brain is in use. Your brain grows as neurons get denser and new neurons are added.

What’s a neuron? The brain is made up of billions of neurons that work together to run our bodies and our minds. 30,000 neurons can fit on the head of a pin. Neurons are cells that share information with each other.

How do neurons share information? Neurons communicate by passing along an electrical impulse. Electrical impulses are passed from one neuron to the next through the release of chemicals called neurotransmitters.

How do neurons get denser with use? Under heavy use, neurons develop new dendrites so that they can communicate more efficiently with each other. Before effort After effort

How do neurons increase in number? The human brain constantly generates progenitor cells that can turn into neurons. A brain that is learning needs to add neurons to store and communicate the new information. This process by which a progenitor cell becomes a neuron is called neurogenesis.

How do we know that brains grow as we learn? Animal studies prove that the brain grows when challenged. Rats raised in enriched cages have brains that are 10% heavier than the brains of rats raised in plain cages.

Similarity #2 Muscles and brains only develop when challenged by increasingly difficult tasks.

To develop bigger muscles… You need to lift heavier and heavier weights.

To develop your brain… You need to do harder and harder work.

Developing muscles and developing your brain is challenging and sometimes uncomfortable.

Muscles only develop… When pushed past the point of comfort.

Brains only develop… When pushed past the point of comfort.

Similarity #3 Building muscles and building your brain takes time and sustained effort.

Sustained effort is required… to build muscle size and to train muscles to develop new skills.

Sustained effort is required… to build new connections between neurons and to integrate new neurons into old neural pathways.

How do we know that sustained effort builds your brain? Buddhist monks spend thousands of hours engaged in meditation, the art of carefully observing one’s own mental processes. Areas of the brain associated with attention and sensory processing are much thicker in the brains of monks than in the brains of people who don’t meditate.

Similarity #4 All girls can build their muscles and their brains.

Muscles and brains start small in everyone and grow with use.

Babies’ muscles start small and weak and get bigger and stronger with use.

Brains become denser and more complex as new mental skills are developed.

Building muscle…. makes you stronger! Your new muscles can help you do all sorts of things.

Building your brain… makes you smarter! Your increased intelligence can help you in all of your classes.

How are muscles and brains alike? 1.Both have tiny structures that GROW AND MULTIPLY. 2.These structures only develop when CHALLENGED by difficult tasks. 3.Both muscles and brains require SUSTAINED EFFORT in order to develop. 4.ALL GIRLS can build their muscles AND their brains.

Profound Impact on Environment Worked with faculty to change students’ response to “road blocks” “I can’t” changes to “That muscle is still growing” Encourages persistence, cultivates belief in intellectual growth

Upper School: Stereotype Threat Claude Steele and the discovery of stereotype threat –Well-known phenomenon in psychology departments –Virtually unknown anywhere else

Upper School: Stereotype Threat What the research shows: –Members of negatively stereotyped groups tend to underperform in situations that have the potential to confirm the negative stereotype - a phenomenon known as stereotype threat –Stereotype threat suppresses girls’ performance on math tests –Interventions can shield students from stereotype threat

Upper School: Stereotype Threat CRG educational programming for girls –Stereotype threat education –G.A.T.O.R.S. pencils

Stereotypes and “Stereotype Threat”

The discovery of “stereotype threat”

What is “stereotype threat”? When a person’s ability is suppressed by anxiety about confirming a negative stereotype.

What if you don’t believe the stereotype? Individuals do not need to believe in a negative stereotype in order to be threatened by the fear of confirming it. They just need to know that other people believe it.

Anticipating “Stereotype Threat” Asian Women Asian Men Latina Women Latino Men Caucasian Women Caucasian Men African-American Women African-American Men Middle Eastern Women Middle Eastern Men

How does “stereotype threat” suppress performance? People become anxious when put in situations where they fear that they might confirm a negative stereotype.

Why is increased anxiety a problem? Instead of accurately attributing their anxiety to “stereotype threat,” people assume that their anxiety arises from the difficulty of the situation (“test anxiety”).

How does anxiety influence test-taking? It increases negative thoughts It increases physiological arousal It reduces working memory capacity It reduces performance expectations It can increase OR reduce effort

What conditions trigger “stereotype threat”? An individual’s awareness of a negative stereotype An individual’s wish to disprove the stereotype A challenging test A variable that “triggers” the stereotype Remember: this whole process is subconscious!

How can “stereotype threat” be prevented? By teaching members of negatively stereotyped groups about the effects of “stereotype threat” –Doing so explains away anxiety and improves test performance!

How else can “stereotype threat” be prevented? By equipping members of stereotyped groups with stereotype-busting information!

G.A.T.O.R.S.! Grades - girls get higher grades than boys All-girls education - girls from single-sex schools outperform boys and girls from coed schools on standardized tests Tests of math and science - Laurel girls score 20% higher than the national average on math and science ACTs Only Laurel teaches girls how to ward off the effects of stereotype threat Reading and English - Laurel girls score 26% higher than the national average on reading and English ACTs S.A.T. - Laurel girls score 20% higher than the national average on the SAT and 5% higher than the independent school average

Putting it all together Be AWARE of the negative stereotypes that apply to you Be ALERT for situations that might trigger stereotype threat ATTRIBUTE ANXIETY to the stereotype threat (not to a lack of ability/preparation on your part) Remember: Your ACTUAL ABILITY has nothing to do with the stereotype

Stereotype Threat for Teachers What teachers need to know “Shielding Students from Stereotype Threat: A guide for teachers” laurelschool.org/abo ut/CRGProductsand Services.cfm

What’s Next? Sharing our work –CRG Symposium, July 2009 –To learn more and/or register go to: Initiative –Promoting girls’ interest in technology and engineering