The Learning Brain: Memory and Brain Development in Children
Despite all our highly publicized efforts to improve our schools, the United States is still falling behind. We recently ranked 15th in the world in reading, math, and science. Clearly, more needs to be done. In The Learning Brain, Torkel Klingberg urges us to use the insights of neuroscience to improve the education of our children. The key to improving education lies in understanding how the brain works: that is where learning takes place, after all. The book focuses in particular on "working memory"--our ability to concentrate and to keep relevant information in our head while ignoring distractions (a topic the author covered in The Overflowing Brain). Research shows enormous variation in working memory among children, with some ten-year-olds performing at the level of a fourteen-year old, others at that of a six-year old. More important, children with high working memory have better math and reading skills, while children with poor working memory consistently underperform. Interestingly, teachers tend to perceive children with poor working memory as dreamy or unfocused, not recognizing that these children have a memory problem. But what can we do for these children? For one, we can train working memory. The Learning Brain provides a variety of different techniques and scientific insights that may just teach us how to improve our children's working memory. Klingberg also discusses how stress can impair working memory (skydivers tested just before a jump showed a 30% drop in working memory) and how aerobic exercise can actually modify the brain's nerve cells and improve classroom performance. Torkel Klingberg is one of the world's leading cognitive neuroscientists, but in this book he wears his erudition lightly, writing with simplicity and good humor as he shows us how to give our children the best chance to learn and grow.
1110866764
The Learning Brain: Memory and Brain Development in Children
Despite all our highly publicized efforts to improve our schools, the United States is still falling behind. We recently ranked 15th in the world in reading, math, and science. Clearly, more needs to be done. In The Learning Brain, Torkel Klingberg urges us to use the insights of neuroscience to improve the education of our children. The key to improving education lies in understanding how the brain works: that is where learning takes place, after all. The book focuses in particular on "working memory"--our ability to concentrate and to keep relevant information in our head while ignoring distractions (a topic the author covered in The Overflowing Brain). Research shows enormous variation in working memory among children, with some ten-year-olds performing at the level of a fourteen-year old, others at that of a six-year old. More important, children with high working memory have better math and reading skills, while children with poor working memory consistently underperform. Interestingly, teachers tend to perceive children with poor working memory as dreamy or unfocused, not recognizing that these children have a memory problem. But what can we do for these children? For one, we can train working memory. The Learning Brain provides a variety of different techniques and scientific insights that may just teach us how to improve our children's working memory. Klingberg also discusses how stress can impair working memory (skydivers tested just before a jump showed a 30% drop in working memory) and how aerobic exercise can actually modify the brain's nerve cells and improve classroom performance. Torkel Klingberg is one of the world's leading cognitive neuroscientists, but in this book he wears his erudition lightly, writing with simplicity and good humor as he shows us how to give our children the best chance to learn and grow.
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The Learning Brain: Memory and Brain Development in Children

The Learning Brain: Memory and Brain Development in Children

by Torkel Klingberg
The Learning Brain: Memory and Brain Development in Children

The Learning Brain: Memory and Brain Development in Children

by Torkel Klingberg

eBook

$20.99 

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Overview

Despite all our highly publicized efforts to improve our schools, the United States is still falling behind. We recently ranked 15th in the world in reading, math, and science. Clearly, more needs to be done. In The Learning Brain, Torkel Klingberg urges us to use the insights of neuroscience to improve the education of our children. The key to improving education lies in understanding how the brain works: that is where learning takes place, after all. The book focuses in particular on "working memory"--our ability to concentrate and to keep relevant information in our head while ignoring distractions (a topic the author covered in The Overflowing Brain). Research shows enormous variation in working memory among children, with some ten-year-olds performing at the level of a fourteen-year old, others at that of a six-year old. More important, children with high working memory have better math and reading skills, while children with poor working memory consistently underperform. Interestingly, teachers tend to perceive children with poor working memory as dreamy or unfocused, not recognizing that these children have a memory problem. But what can we do for these children? For one, we can train working memory. The Learning Brain provides a variety of different techniques and scientific insights that may just teach us how to improve our children's working memory. Klingberg also discusses how stress can impair working memory (skydivers tested just before a jump showed a 30% drop in working memory) and how aerobic exercise can actually modify the brain's nerve cells and improve classroom performance. Torkel Klingberg is one of the world's leading cognitive neuroscientists, but in this book he wears his erudition lightly, writing with simplicity and good humor as he shows us how to give our children the best chance to learn and grow.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780199986859
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 11/02/2012
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Torkel Klingberg, MD, PhD, is Professor of Cognitive Neuroscience at the Stockholm Brain Institute, Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden. His work on child development and brain training is at the international front line. Klingberg leads a major Swedish project on child development, lectures regularly at international conferences, is the recipient of several prizes, and a member of the Nobel Assembly. He is the author of The Overflowing Brain: Information Overload and the Limits of Working Memory (OUP).

Table of Contents

1 Being unlucky when you think - the importance of working memory Remembering what to concentrate on Why do students daydream? The working memories of the Nynäshamn children ADHD and children with low working memories 2 The growing brain - how the brain develops and matures The development of the brain The brain matures Genes and the brain The white matter 3 Through the Pyrenees by motorbike - the risk-taking teenage brain Risks and rewards Neuroscience and the law 4 “Now I am really awake for the first time ever” - long term memory Children's long-term memory The key to the memory Improving the long-term memory 5 Mathematics, memory and space Counting babies Retaining numbers in working memory The mnemonic map Mathematical areas Mathematics and gender Dyscalculia - does it exist? Premature birth and dyscalculia Training programs 6 Reading, dyslexia and problematic relationships Learning to read Reading areas of the brain and dyslexia Dyslexia: genetics and displaced cells Why the problems are interconnected Dyslexia training and neuroscientific predictions 7 The early environment and brain development - the importance of stimulation and engaged parents Stimulating environments and brain development The role of parents in memory and stress 8 Skydiving and expectations - what acute and chronic stress do to us Stress hormones and nerve cells Social stress Chronic stress 9 Cognitive training, memory techniques and music The dream of the perfect memory The brain of a memory champion Working memory training The art of training Can everything be trained? Music 10 Body and soul Jogging and the brain Intelligence and infections 11 This will change everything Five themes A schoolgirl of the future References Bibliography
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