Thursday, January 28, 2016

Brains in Pain Cannot Learn! 3 ways to calm the stress response.





Brains in Pain Cannot Learn!

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Educators want nothing more than for our students to feel successful and excited to learn, and to understand the importance of their education. We want our students' attention and respect to match our own. I believe that most if not all of our students desire the same, but walking through our classroom doors are beautifully complex youth who are neurobiologically wired to feel before thinking.

Carrying In

Educators and students are carrying in much more than backpacks, car keys, conversations, partially-completed homework, and outward laughter. Buried deep in the brain's limbic system is an emotional switching station called the amygdala, and it is here that our human survival and emotional messages are subconsciously prioritized and learned. We continually scan environments for feelings of connectedness and safety. I am learning that the students who look oppositional, defiant, or aloof may be exhibiting negative behavior because they are in pain and presenting their stress response.
Over 29 percent of young people in the U.S., ages 9-17, are affected by anxiety and depression disorders (PDF). The thinking lobes in the prefrontal cortex shut down when a brain is in pain.

Trauma and the Brain

What is trauma? When we hear this word, we tend to think of severe neglect or abusive experiences and relationships. This is not necessarily true. A traumatized brain can also be a tired, hungry, worried, rejected, or detached brain expressing feelings of isolation, worry, angst, and fear. In youth, anger is often the bodyguard for deep feelings of fear. Trauma-filled experiences can be sudden or subtle, but the neurobiological changes from negative experiences cause our emotional brain to create a sensitized fear response. When we feel distress, our brains and bodies prioritize survival, and we pay attention to the flood of emotional messages triggering the question, "Am I safe?" We react physiologically with an irritated limbic system that increases blood pressure, heart rate, and respiration with an excessive secretion of the neuro hormones cortisol and adrenaline pumping through our bodies. Chronic activation of the fear response can damage other parts of the brain responsible for cognition and learning.
We are all neurobiologically wired for social connection and attachment to others. When children don't receive healthy connections in early development, the brain rewires and adapts just as readily to unhealthy environments. If brain development is disrupted by adversity at any age, but especially in early development (PDF), the skills of problem solving, reflection, and emotional regulation are compromised and diminished. Children and adolescents need stimulation and nurturance for healthy development and attachment. Students whose development is disrupted often walk through the doors of our schools mistrusting adults.

Prime the Brain

To learn and problem solve, we must prime the brain for engagement and feelings of safety. In recent years, there has been a significant emphasis on Common Core proficiency while teacher training has often lost sight of the impact of understanding brain development in students. The almond-shaped clusters of neurons resting deep in each temporal lobe must be quieted if learning and well-being are to be exercised and addressed. Educators too need to be aware of our brain states and subconscious emotional triggers that could throw us into a power struggle and a stress-response state as we interface with our students.
What can we do to create calm and safe brain states within ourselves and within the students who walk in with an activated fear response?
We first must understand that feelings are the language of the limbic system. When a student in stress becomes angry or shut down, he or she won't hear our words. Talking a student through any discipline procedure or thought reflection sheet in the heat of the moment is fruitless. Here are three ways to calm the stress response -- two of them through immediate action, and the third by a brief science lesson.

3 ways to calm the stress response.

1. Movement

Movement is critical to learning while calming the stress and fear response. Teachers and students together could design a space, a labyrinth of sorts, where students can walk or move to relieve the irritation of the amygdale. Physical activities such as push-ups, jogging in place, jumping jacks, and yoga movements help to calm the limbic brain and bring the focus back to learning and reasoning.

2. Focused Attention Practices

Focused attention practices teach students how to breathe deeply while focusing on a particular stimulus. When we take two or three minutes a few times each day or class period and teach students how to breathe deeply, we are priming the brain for increased attention and focus. These practices might also include a stimulus such as sound, visualization, or the taste of a food. The focused attention increases an oxygenated blood and glucose flow to the frontal lobes of the brain where emotional regulation, attention, and problem solving occur.

3. Understanding the Brain

Teaching students about their amygdala and fear response is so empowering. When we understand that this biology is many thousands of years in the making, hardwired to protect us, our minds begin to relax through knowing that our reactions to negative experiences are natural and common. A middle-school teacher and her students have named the amygdala "Amy G. Dala." By personifying this ancient, emotionally-driven structure in our brains, the students are befriending their fear responses and learning how to lessen negative emotion. We cannot always control the experiences in our lives, but we can shift how we respond, placing the science of our brains in the driver's seat of discipline!
Have you recognized students experiencing emotional pain? How have you helped them overcome this?




Risk taking across the life span and around the globe

Risk taking across the life span and around the globe

Researchers found a connection between the levels of hardship in the country and its citizens’ propensity to take risks

news | January 25, 2016

In January 2016 Psychological Science published an article called “Propensity for Risk Taking Across the Life Span and Around the Globe“. We asked one of the authors, Prof. Rui Mata from the University of Basel, to comment on this study.

The Study

We investigated age differences in risk taking around the globe by analyzing data from the World Values Survey, an international survey that compiled the values and views of people from all over the world. In doing so, we compared a total of 147,118 responses from people aged 15 to 99 (52% women), from a total of 77 countries. Participants were asked to indicate their propensity to participate in adventurous and risky activities on a scale of one (very much like me) to six (not at all like me).The results showed that the propensity to take risks decreases with age in most countries, including Germany, Russia, and the US. In other countries, however, such as Nigeria, Mali, and Pakistan, risk behavior did not change much with age. More generally, the results suggest that in countries with great poverty and difficult living conditions, the propensity to take risks is higher and remains high even in old age: When we compared the current standards of living in these countries, looking at, for instance, poverty, homicide rate, income per capita, and income inequality, we found a clear connection between the levels of hardship in the country and its citizens’ propensity to take risks. In sum, whether people are willing to take risks in old age depends on external circumstances.One reason could be that citizens of countries in which resources are scarce have to take more risks and also compete with each other than in wealthier countries in order to thrive across adulthood.


Philosopher Patricia Smith Churchland on the nature of self-control, the reward system, and risk-taking in humans and animals

Background

Ever since Adolph Quetelet described the relation between age and crime in the 19th century using population statistics, that we have known that young adults, in particular males, are more prone to taking risks, such as engaging in violence and criminal activities, relative to females and older adults. It was also known that there are significant cross-cultural and cohort differences in the patterns of age differences in risk taking, yet, the ultimate reasons for such differences had not been systematically investigated. Our results support theories from behavioral ecology that see risk taking as an adaptive strategy to deal with uncertainty in the environment, which leads to predictable patterns of individual and age differences in investment and reproductive strategies as a function of environmental resources and opportunities.



Future directions

The results highlight the fact that when studying human development phenomena, we need to take into account the interaction between humans and their environment. For research on decision making, this means that—unlike what many economists assume—individual propensity cannot be considered stable over time and are a function of individual life experiences. We have been using longitudinal data from the German Socio-economic Panel (SOEP) to trace individual and age-related changes in risk propensity in various areas of life and over a time span of up to ten years. Results from this study will represents the first study to survey people of all ages over a longer period of time in order to investigate how changes in risk disposition in the areas of finance, health, career, leisure time, and social life are a function of specific life events taking place across one’s life span.

5 Financial Goals You Should Reach Before Turning 30


financial_goals_examples

Early in your career, it’s easy to get caught up in frivolous and luxurious spending habits – having fun spending your first taste of full-time income. Many 20-somethings miss the opportunity to take a solid step toward properly preparing for the future.
Here are five examples of financial goals you should achieve before you reach 30 years old.

1. Focus on Paying Off Debt

Your 20s are a great time to focus on and pay off your debt. Debt is easily accumulated as a young adult from education, travel, material investments, etc.
According to the Nerd Wallet, the average US household pays $6,658 in interest per year, spending 9% of their income just on interest. That same $6,658 could buy you 6.3 ounces of gold, which has shown itself to grow in value rather than eat away at your earnings like credit card debt.

2. Create a Monthly Budget Plan

Paying off your debt is much easier said than done, but is still very attainable with the right budget. Clearly outline your monthly expenses and set a comfortable budget to cover these without dipping further into debt. Even early in your adult life, when your budget is small and expenses minimal, it’s important to have a clear understanding of what you want to save and how you will save it. Set a goal for yourself to set aside a certain percentage of your income each month in savings. A clear budget will help you achieve this financial goal.

3. Reduce a Single Luxury

Is your budget insufficient to reach your financial goals? Consider giving up one luxury you enjoy on a regular basis.
Going cold turkey on several luxuries rarely works and often leads to even more impulse spending. Instead, choose a single luxury like your daily latte from Starbucks or one take out meal a week and remove them from your expenses. Swapping a coffee machine for that latte will save you $1,077.50 a year.

4. Build Up 6 Months of Emergency Savings

It’s good to put money into investments or long term savings, but don’t neglect saving for expenses that might pop up unexpectedly. With the GoldMoney Prepaid Card, you can easily access your savings when life throws you a curve ball. Effective long term savings will be inaccessible for some time, so once you have determined your monthly expenses, make sure you have enough funds set aside to cover 6 months of your regular expenses in case of emergency. This will cover a lost job, illness, injury, or other unexpected event.

5. Start Investing – Small but Steady

Choose a relatively diverse range of initial investments and start setting money aside from your income. A 5% savings rate is a good starting point, with a goal of 15-20% by the time you reach 30.
Make sure at least some portion of that money is set aside in hard assets, such as gold, that are not only more accessible but better protected against volatile shifts in currency.
Please leave us your comments below and share some examples of financial goals.

5 quick and easy ways to save money on your grocery bill






5 quick and easy ways to save money on your grocery bill

Fruit market with various colorful fresh fruits and vegetables - Market series
Save money on your grocery bill with the help of these five simple tips. While it can be tempting to eat out constantly or buy dinners every night, your grocery bill can be one of the biggest expenses throughout your life. Cut those costs down with the help of these five efficient, money-saving strategies.

1) Nonperishable? Not a problem

One of the best ways to save money is to buy in bulk. Unfortunately, that often results in losing out on food when it goes bad. However, if you stock up on your nonperishable items when they are on sale and when you have the opportunity to buy them in bulk, you will save a significant amount of money because you will not be constantly paying the highest price for them. Since these items have a long and forgiving expiration date, it can be incredibly valuable to take advantage of times when you are able to stock up by buying in bulk or when they are on sale.

2) Soup for dinner and lunch and lunch and lunch…

Make more than you need to when you make a pot of soup. Slow-cookers are a genius invention for people who are attempting to save money on food because you can make more than you need to at one time and freeze the leftovers for later. This is a great way to have soup ready-to-go when you leave for work in the morning, which will save you on your lunch bill, as well as a great way to stock up on something that is delicious and easy to re-heat. Plus, it is generally cheaper to add a few more base ingredients to soup to make it go further than to make two separate batches. Get to cookin’!



3) Be smart with your list

When you go grocery shopping, decide what you need before you get to the store. Make a list of meals you plan on cooking throughout the week and write down the specific ingredients you will need. This will prevent you from buying everything that sounds sort of good and help you to narrow down your needs so that you can buy in bulk and use ingredients for more than one recipe. It also helps you avoid temptation at the store because you know what you want to make, so you will be less likely to cave in to the more-expensive ready-made meals in the freezer section or hot food sections. Bonus: it might even make your trip to the grocery store faster, and we all know that time is money!

4) Cook in bulk on Sundays

You will save a lot of money if you make your meals for the week on Sundays so that you can take them with you rather than resorting to buying food at work. When you go to the grocery store during your lunch break every day and buy a $10 sandwich that could have been made for significantly less at home, you are adding unnecessary strain to your grocery bill. Cook ahead of time for the entire week so that you will be prepared for what comes your way and so that you aren’t tempted to spend all of your hard-earned cash during your lunch breaks.

5) Eat before you shop

When you aren’t hungry, you will be able to focus more on what you need rather than on what you want. If your stomach is empty, you will likely spend much of your trip to the grocery store looking for things you can eat right now or selecting items that you don’t need because your eyes are bigger than your stomach at that moment. Prevent this from happening by eating before you shop.




Wednesday, January 27, 2016

How to ban the stigmas in primary educational systems






How to ban the stigmas in primary educational systems

Response to Intervention: Safe Spaces for Math and Literacy

At Charles R. Drew Charter School, the Literacy Center and Math Lab provide fun, engaging, and enriching interventions to help support students most in need.
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  • Video Producer: Sarita Khurana
  • Editor: Melissa Thompson
  • Production Coordinator: Julia Lee
  • Graphics: Cait Camarata, Douglas Keely
  • Head of Production: Gillian Grisman
  • Director of Video: Amy Erin Borovoy

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  • Producer/Editors: Mitch Eason, Julie Konop
  • Schools That Work Producer: Kristin Atkins
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  • Production Assistant: Blair Winders

Overview

Charles R. Drew Charter School uses Response to Intervention (RTI) to reach their goal of 100 percent of students meeting or exceeding state standards in all subject areas. Their achievements include:
  • Lowering the number of students in special education classes from 13 to 8 percent
  • Outperforming the state in reading, English language arts, math, and science for the past five years
  • A 2016 Title 1 Reward School designation
How do they do this? What makes them unique? Their intensive early-elementary RTI and Tier 3 instruction model makes them unique.

How It's Done

The Response to Intervention (RTI) model identifies every student's academic and behavioral needs and provides personalized support to meet those needs. It consists of tiered intervention support, benchmark assessments, and frequent progress monitoring. This three-tiered model was originally developed to properly diagnose students with learning disabilities, but RTI has become more widely used among educators to better differentiate across all learners.

How to Identify Which Students Need Tiered Instruction

Charles R. Drew Charter School uses a universal screener -- a schoolwide Aimsweb Screening -- three times a year: in the first week of school, in December, and at the end of the school year.
According to India Kaufman, Charles R. Drew's math support teacher for third, fourth, and fifth grade, the screening "allows us to have data on every student in the building. And with that data," she adds, "we're able to formulate groups and target the students that will be in need of those interventions."
Generally, those who perform in the bottom 10 percent in literacy and the bottom 20 percent in math are in Tier 3. Those who perform in the bottom 25 percent in literacy are in Tier 2. All students are in Tier 1 instruction. This system also incorporates teacher feedback: what they know about their students and what they've seen in class.

Tier 1

Every student gets Tier 1 instruction, which is universal instruction for all students in their regular classroom.

Tier 2

Charles R. Drew Charter School uses two, grade-level-based methods of giving Tier 2 instruction:

Tier 2 Instruction K-2

Grades K-2 receive an hour-long intervention block in the mornings. These one-hour blocks are fixed into the schedule for lower elementary students, instead of regular instruction. During this time, the regular instruction teachers become Tier 2 intervention teachers, and students move from their homeroom teacher to an intervention teacher. Within each grade level, instead of providing a variety of interventions to numerous small groups, each teacher focuses on one intervention, like fluency or phonemic awareness.
During this block, the enrichment teachers -- P.E, visual arts, and music -- and their paraprofessionals assist the intervention teachers. "The certified teacher will provide instruction, and then the students will rotate through specific activities guided by each educator," explains Nicole Tuttle, Charles R. Drew's director of literacy. This practice creates a teacher-student ratio of about 1:5.
Lower elementary students who don't need Tier 2 instruction are grouped into independent projects that need little teacher supervision. For example, a group of students excelling in literacy might be formed into a book study group for independent reading and discussion.

Tier 2 Instruction 3-5

Grades 3-5 integrate Tier 2 instruction into regular classroom instruction. Grade-level teachers divide their students into small groups. Those who need more support do guided group work with the teacher. Those who have met or exceeded standards work independently in small groups, and the teacher checks in with them throughout the class.
"We are providing such intensive interventions at that K-2 level that students are getting caught up, and are not ending up in special education," says Tuttle. "We feel like the more interventions we can give kids in those early years, when they’re learning to read and not reading to learn, then we’re going to catch them before they get to third grade."

Tier 3: Creating Safe Spaces for Math and Literacy

All students at Charles R. Drew have two daily enrichment classes, such as art, music, and robotics. The staff uses this time to provide intensive interventions two to three times a week, pulling students from their enrichment classes instead of from regular classroom instruction.
"We did pull students from their grade-level [classes], and we saw tremendous gains," recalls Tuttle. "Students were going from reading 15 words a minute to 45 words a minute. We saw these kids make huge progress, and then when it came time for the students to take our state test, the CRCT, they didn't do well. We were frustrated. So we looked at what could we do to make sure that the students are still being instructed on those grade-level standards, but getting the interventions that they need."
To fix this, they began using one period of students’ enrichment time for interventions. Students got the intervention support they needed and were able to stay in their regular instruction to meet their grade-level standards. Since that change, close to 100 percent of their students -- and sometimes 100 percent -- have been meeting or exceeding the state standards each year.

Treating Tier 3 Like an Enrichment Class

By creating the Literacy Center and the Math Lab, the school made Tier 3 instruction as fun and engaging as an enrichment class.
"Our goal is to make it a different enrichment option for them. We recognize that yes, it's serious work, and they need to learn to read [and to understand math], but it also has to be fun," emphasizes Dawn Stephen, Charles R. Drew's literacy teacher. "It has to be engaging, and they do have to burn some energy because it is their time away from the general classroom. So there have to be opportunities for them to talk, to move, to get up and down, and to touch materials that they wouldn't generally touch in the classroom."

Create Engaging Activities

Among the Tier 3 specialists' engagement strategies in the Literacy Center and Math Lab, they use a program called Phonics Splits, a quick-paced game where fourth- and fifth-grade students move colored tiles around the classroom, stretch, and do other kinesthetic activities. Kindergarten students sometimes write in shaving cream, in sand, and on tables.

Provide Positive Feedback

Small group work increases students' opportunities to receive positive feedback from teachers and peers. Charles R. Drew teachers make a point to support, encourage, and praise their students. They also set up achievable goals to boost student confidence.

Give Your Students Responsibility

The students are in charge of things like tiles and markers. "Everyone has a job in the group. The kids love that," says Stephen. "It's the small things that people don't think fifth graders would like, but they love that, especially if they have a hard time reading. That's their time to shine and be the best at something. That's their time to feel safe and in charge."

Reduce the Stigma of Tier 3

Sometimes it can feel stigmatizing when pulled out of class. How does Charles R. Drew address this issue?

Make It Fun for Lower Grades

"For the little kids, it's not stigmatizing at all," explains Stephen. "They see coming to the Literacy Center and [the Math Lab] as another enrichment period. They get free books and stickers. They love coming."

Be Direct With Upper Grades

For students old enough to understand why they need RTI, it can be an uneasy experience at first. To ease them into Tier 3, Charles R. Drew educators initiate one-on-one conversations to help them recognize their current skill level and emphasize how extra support will help them. For example, if a student is reading 50 words per minute but needs to be at 120 words, the teacher can explain this. Once a student understands that he or she needs more support, the teacher can say, "I'm here to help you, and this will be a safe experience for you."

The Math Lab and Literacy Center Structure

Create Small, Targeted Groups

Small groups can easily focus on improving specific weaknesses. The Literacy Center is staffed with one teacher for every five students, and the Math Lab with one teacher for every seven. If needed, those groups are broken down even further.
"I have groups within groups," says Kaufman. "Even though I may have seven children at one time, within that group I may break it down to two students or three students or four, depending on whatever skill they need to work on."

Staffing

Working with paraprofessionals offsets the cost of a small student-teacher ratio. The Literacy Lab has a staff of four and the Math Lab has three -- one certified teacher for each, and the rest paraprofessionals.

Utilize the Same Programs Across Tiers

Charles R. Drew uses Really Great Reading's Phonics Boost and Phonics Blitz as their upper elementary literacy programs, and KinderPhonics for lower elementary. Because the Literacy Center uses the same program that is used in regular instruction, students learn one methodology and get a double dose of their content to strengthen their learning skills.
According to Tuttle, "One thing that was so important, and has made our paras so successful, is that we choose programs that are easy to follow. They have a structured scope and sequence: lesson one looks like this, lesson two looks like this. And then we can come in and troubleshoot as we need, but they know what they're doing, from point A in the program to point Z."

Monitor Your Students' Progress

Charles R. Drew uses the benchmark screening results to set goals for each student and monitor their progress weekly using both Aimsweb's and the University of Oregon's DIBELS Data System progress monitoring tools. "That's how we know what we're monitoring, what skills and what strengths and what standards they need to master," says Kaufman.
"In kindergarten, we might do progress monitoring just on sound fluency," explains Stephen. "We might have them reading sounds for one minute, and then we'll graph how many sounds they're reading correctly as they get older. Or we might start with just letter fluency. As they learn to read, we'll move into reading. The older kids will note their own progress and chart their reading per minute."
The counselor, teachers, and intervention analysts, known as the Student Support Team, meet weekly to evaluate methods and results. They lay out the data, interventions used, and student progress. If the students aren't making progress, the staff adjusts the interventions. And if the students are making progress, they'll soon exit Tier 3 instruction.