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    Using Brain-based Learning to Help Struggling Online High School English Students

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    Full Text Thesis (1.276Mb)
    Date
    2018-12
    Author
    Dondlinger, Daniel J.
    Publisher
    University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point
    Metadata
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    Permanent Link
    http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/80142
    Type
    Thesis
    Description
    It is important for all teachers to have a basic understanding how learning occurs. Teachers who understand how students’ brains constantly gather data and process it can plan their lessons to accommodate the processing needs of their students. Perhaps the greatest take away for teachers from Brain-Based Learning is that our student’s brains can and do change. Once a teacher accepts this premise, the student learning potential is nearly unlimited. The question of helping our struggling English Language Arts students learn changes from “If they can learn this content?” to “How can they learn this content best?” The idea of planning for and accommodating student brains relates to classroom climate. We see that classroom climate is one major portion of a successful classroom. As a part of classroom climate, the teacher establishes that every student is unique and has a unique brain. Within those unique brains reside a diversity of experiences, academic and otherwise. The students need their teacher to understand this. The only true way for a teacher to learn about his or her students is to develop relationships with them. We see that the student teacher relationship is one of the most influential factors in student success. The online teacher has some challenges, such as lack of physical proximity and difficulty of communication; however, the online teacher can develop relationships with his or her students through synchronous sessions, telephone calls, texting, and instant messaging. Relationships allows teachers to work on general schooling skills.
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    • Chancellor Thomas George and Barbara Harbach Thesis and Dissertation Collection

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