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Eliot, Lise – Educational Leadership, 2010
Eliot, a neuroscientist who has analyzed gender differences in children's brains, asserts that--contrary to the widely held idea that boys' and girls' brains are hardwired differently--few differences exist in the neural structures and neurochemistry of boys' and girls' brains. Actual ability differences between the genders are quite small as…
Descriptors: Females, Gender Differences, Gender Bias, Males
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Gurian, Michael; Stevens, Kathy – Educational Leadership, 2004
New positron emission tomography (PET) and MRI technologies, which allow looking inside the brains, show that the brains of boys and girls differ both structurally and functionally that profoundly affect the human learning. These gender differences in the brain are corroborated in males and females throughout the world and do not differ…
Descriptors: Gender Differences, Neurology, Brain, Learning Processes
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King, Kelly; Gurian, Michael – Educational Leadership, 2006
This article describes and discusses, some of the 100 structural differences between the male and female brain identified by some researchers. Teachers need to be aware of these differences, and how they manifest themselves in male and female students. If teachers are not familiar with these differences, and how they affect learning styles,…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Neurological Organization, Gender Differences, Genetics
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King, Kelley; Gurian, Michael – Educational Leadership, 2006
Using brain-based research, Douglass Elementary School in Boulder, Colorado, looked at the natural assets that both girls and boys bring to school and realized that its classrooms were generally a better fit for the verbal-emotive, sit-still, take-notes, listen-carefully, multitasking girl. Teachers tended to see the natural assets that boys bring…
Descriptors: Males, Brain, Experiential Learning, Educational Environment