A Dozen Mind-expanding Strategies To Increase Brain Capacity
The brain learns and grows through interactions with its environment
. We know, because of scientific research, that mental stimulation improves brain function and actually protects against cognitive decline. Physical exercise and stimulation are just as critical as mental stimulation. Given the trend of reduced recess time and physical education requirements, we should rethink how we spend class time and introduce research proven activities that expand brain function.
Here are twelve ways to encourage brain "growth":
1. Provide tasks that help develop agility and hand-brain coordination such as chess, Tai chi, Brain Gym, Bal-A-Vis-X, and working with modeling clay or play-dough.
2. Engage students in neurobic exercises such as eating or writing with the opposite hand, attempting to communicate without talking, finger-writing words on the desk with their eyes closed, and activities that combine two senses (listening to music while painting or doing class work).
3. Create review materials in the form of crossword puzzles. Crosswords improve nuances of language. They exercise the brain cells involved in word retrieval, vocabulary, comprehension, and conduction.
4. Improve students' spatial relationship ability by having them draw face vases. On the left, draw a face then copy it on the right trying to make it as identical as possible in the opposite direction.
5. Tongue twisters increase the activity of brain cells in Broca's area, which controls the articulation of speech. Create tongue twisters for review material, or just engage students in age-old tongue twisters to stimulate brain activity.
6. Visual working memory is highly correlated to intelligence: People with a bigger VWM tend to score better on cognitive challenges. Have students practice multiple ways of visually encoding and retrieving information.
7. Associate concepts with visual images. Include diagrams, tables, outlines, etc. when presenting and practicing for information recall.
8. Take advantage of pictures, cartoons, charts, graphs, or any other visual material. Have students draw many of these things themselves.
9. Have students try to visualize how various ideas relate to each other and draw a graph, chart, picture, or some other representation of the material.
10. Teach students to habitually convert difficult material into pictures or diagrams in student notes, or to convert words into mental images on the blackboard of their mind.
11. Have students identify how things are similar or different, then develop graphic representations of similarities and differences in the concept, unit, fact set, language, landscape, etc.
12. Teach note-taking strategies like clustering, webbing, and mind mapping to enhance the brain's ability to process what to keep, delete, or alter.
Copyright (c) 2010 AIMHI Educational Programs
by: Susan Fitzell
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