By Marcia L. Tate, Ph.D.
Visualize the worst presentation or training session that you ever attended.
The chances are that you were talked at by a presenter who was either
boring or argumentative. I would bet that you actually moved very little
and maybe not even at all unless there was a break or lunchtime. Then
attempt to recall what you learned in the session. The learning curve
was probably directly proportional to the degree of active engagement
you experienced. In fact, there is a saying that is as follows: As the
bottom gets number, the brain gets dumber!
In the best-seller, Sit & Get Won't Grow Dendrites: 20
Professional Learning Strategies that Engage the Adult Brain, I
describe the worst presentation that I ever attended. It was conducted
by a gentleman who had limited knowledge of the subject matter or adult
learning theory. He ran in at the last minute, after the participants
were seated, slapped several transparencies on the overhead (which
were typed in single space text), and expected us to read them ourselves.
Since we were unable to accomplish this impossible task, he read them
aloud to us for well over an hour. Although I will always remember
the experience (since it taught me what not to do as a presenter),
I never did understand or remember the content presented.
Brain research and learning style theory relate that there are twenty
strategies that all trainers should use when presenting to adult audiences.
These same strategies facilitate comprehension and retention of content
since they take advantage of the way all brains learn best and therefore,
should also be used with students. In fact, these methods of delivery
cause dendrites, or memory cells, to grow in the brain. They also address
all four learning modalities: visual, auditory, kinesthetic, and tactile.
This article will delineate all twenty of the strategies and provide
some authentic reasons as to why they should be used to make your presentations
unforgettable.
1. Brainstorming and Discussion
The neuroscientists are telling us that the person in a training session
who is doing the most talking is growing the most brain cells. In the
majority of sessions I have experienced, that person is the presenter.
It shouldn't be! Participants must be provided with ample opportunity
to brainstorm ideas without fear of reprisal and to debate controversial
issues. One person's idea actually causes another person to search
their brains for other related ideas (Gregory & Chapman 2002).
2. Drawing and Artwork
How many times have I heard adults make the statement, I can't
draw! This is probably because they haven't had the opportunity
to draw anything since they were in the primary grades. Yet the amygdala
(the seat of emotion in the brain) and the thalamus (the receptor for
information from the five senses) are both activated when people are
drawing (Jensen 2001). Have your adult learners draw during training
to facilitate retention of information.
3. Field Trips
Try taking your adult audiences on field trips where they can experience
real world learning since a great deal of information stored in the brain
comes from concrete experiences (Westwater & Wolfe 2000). In fact,
two of the world's greatest teachers, Artistotle and Socrates,
instructed through the use of field trips.
4. Games
Individuals are motivated by the need for fun (Glasser 1990). Using games,
even in a classroom of adult learners is extremely motivating. Review
content through a good game of Jeopardy! Toss a ball randomly so that
participants can provide answers to designated questions. Watch the energy
level in your training soar!
5. Graphic Organizers, Semantic Maps, and Word Webs
I never teach anything complicated or confusing without the use of a
graphic organizer. Graphic organizers work because they visually represent
linear ideas and are beneficial to both left and right hemispheres of
the brain (Tate 2003). Also referred to as thinking, mind, concept, or
semantic maps or even word webs, they provide connections between bits
of information and make the learning easier to understand and remember.
6. Humor
Opening your training session with a joke not only relaxes you
but also enlivens your participants, reduces their stress, and improves
their creativity (Feigelson 1998). In fact, humor and laughter are so
good for the brain and body that major comedians live five to twenty
years longer than the average human.
7. Manipulatives
The connections between the brain and the hands are so complicated that
no single theory can explain it (Jensen 2001). When participants in your
training sessions are manipulating cards or even building models, they
are using their spatial intelligence and reinforcing content.
8. Metaphors, Analogies, and Similes
Finish these sentences. Like sands through the hourglass, _________(so
are the days of our lives). Like a good neighbor, _________(State Farm
is there). When trainers connect two dissimilar items together through
the use of a metaphor, analogy, or simile, the brain has a hook or connection
for remembering the new information.
9. Mnemonic Devices
I refer to mnemonic devices brain short-cuts since they are connected
ways for the brain to remember a term or a list of items. Health officials
know that the public will never remember Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome
so they just call it AIDS. Try having your participants create their
own mnemonic devices for something you want them to remember.
10. Movement
One of the strongest memory systems in the brain is procedural memory
which involves the use of the body in learning. Things that you learned
while your body was moving are long remembered, e.g., driving a car or
riding a bike. When participants are moving around the room to meet with
a date and discuss your content, they are strengthening their memory
for the information.
11. Music, Rhythm, Rhyme, and Rap
Finish this phrase, Conjunction Junction, _________. If you said what's
your function? you already know the memory value of music. Allow participants
to work in groups or individually to write songs, rhymes, or raps as
they reconstruct knowledge learned in your training session and they
will thank you.
12. Project-Based and Problem-Based Instruction
Adult learners who have no projects to apply or problems to solve in
the real world following a training session are adults who often leave
their learning in the workshop. After all, brains grow better in the
real world than in an artificial place called school (Westwater & Wolfe
2000). Always give your participants a project to implement which will
help them apply what you taught them in their real world.
13. Reciprocal Teaching, Cooperative Learning, and Peer Coaching
Have participants complete an activity or make a list of items individually.
Then have them work with a partner or in a group to improve their performance
or to add to their list of items. Invariably, the group's performance
will always be superior to any individual performance in the class, thereby,
proving that two heads are better than one. Having participants coach
one another while applying new skills or learning new content is invaluable
for providing ongoing support.
14. Role Plays, Drama, Pantomimes, and Charades
A heated game of Charades is still a favorite pastime for an adult party.
Having your participants act out a particular concept or role play how
they would solve a certain problem creates concrete memories in the brains
of your adult learners. This strategy places the learning closer to the
real world, the reason the brain exists in the first place.
15. Storytelling
Watch a speaker or a minister begin to tell a story and notice that
everyone is listening. This is because stories provide a script for people
to link information to in their memories (Markowitz & Jensen 1999).
Begin and end your training session with a true story and capture the
attention of all learners, especially if the story is emotional.
16. Technology
Technological advances have revolutionized every aspect of our lives
including how teachers teach and how people learn. Provide experiences
which equip participants with the ability to utilize the technology to
the fullest extent, including e-mailing a pen pal in another country
or researching on the Internet for a project. A word of caution, some
teachers utilize technology as their sole source of lesson delivery.
Don't forget the importance of movement and role play for strengthening
procedural memory and developing a healthier, more active student.
17. Visualization and Guided Imagery
Everything happens twice, once in the mind and once in reality (Covey
1996). Even the magnificent Blue Angels Fighter Squadron sits in a room
and visualizes its routine prior to getting into the airplanes. Try having
participants visualize what they wish to accomplish and then stand back
and watch them accomplish it.
18. Visuals
When they say a picture is worth a thousand words, they are not kidding.
Showing the brains of your learners what you are teaching is far more
memorable than telling them about it. Use charts, graphs, videos, PowerPoint®,
overheads, and other visuals to make the learning come alive. Be careful
not to overdue your PowerPoint® with too many slides and a lack of
active engagement in between. I have seen audiences disengage when this
was the only method of delivery.
19. Work Study and Action Research
People learn to do a job by doing the job. That is why internships,
practicums, and apprenticeships are invaluable for acquiring on-the-job
training. Providing participants with opportunities to try out hypotheses
in the name of action research ensures practical application of new content.
After all, people create new and very strong neural networks from actual
experience, not artificial paper and pencil tasks (Westwater & Wolfe
2000).
20. Writing
When I teach, I provide participants with only a framework or outline
of the content on the handouts. Why? Because we create the handouts as
we learn. Having participants write in short chunks of information increases
memory. Have you ever written a list of groceries only to leave the list
at home? Isn't it funny that you are still able to recall many
of the items on your list when you got in the store simply because you
wrote the items down ahead of time?
Summary
Now that you know the twenty ways you can teach anyone anything, there
is no excuse ever for conducting a boring and meaningless training session.
My texts, Worksheets Don't Grow Dendrites: 20 Instructional Strategies
that Engage the Brain (2003) and Sit & Get Won't Grow Dendrites:
20 Professional Learning Strategies that Engage the Adult Brain (2004)
together provide more that four hundred pieces of research and three
hundred brain-compatible teaching activities for both student and adult
learners. When I teach young and old alike, I plan my content around
the aforementioned twenty strategies and receive rave reviews. But, more
importantly, I also produce learners who understand and retain the content
and have fun while doing it. Why would you want to teach any other way?
To do so would be professional malpractice.
| References |
| Covey, S. (1996). The seven habits of highly
effective people. Salt Lake City, UT: Covey Leadership Center. |
| Feigelson, S. (1998). Energize your meetings
with laughter. Alexandria, VA: Association for Supervision and Curriculum
Development. |
| Glasser, W. (1990). The quality school. New
York: Harper & Row. |
| Gregory G., & Chapman, C. (2002). Differentiated
instructional strategies: One size doesn't fit all. Thousand
Oaks, CA: Corwin Press. |
| Jensen, E. (2001). Arts with the brain in mind.
Alexandria, VA: Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development. |
| Markowitz, K., & Jensen, E. (1999). The
great memory book. San Diego, CA: The Brain Store. |
| Tate, M. (2003). Worksheets don't grow
dendrites; 20 instructional strategies that engage the brain. Thousand
Oaks, CA: Corwin Press. |
| Tate, M. (2004). Sit & get won't grow
dendrites: 20 professional learning strategies that engage the adult
brain. Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin Press. |
| Westwater, A., & Wolfe, P. (2000). The brain-compatible
curriculum. Educational Leadership, 58(3), 49-52. |
Originally published in the 2006 January/February
issue of Camping Magazine. |