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Luc Rousseau – Mind, Brain, and Education, 2024
Despite considerable progress made in educational neuroscience, neuromyths persist in the teaching profession, hampering translational endeavors. The initial wave of interventions designed to dispel educational neuromyths was predominantly directed at preservice teachers. More recent work in the field, reviewed here, has shifted its focus…
Descriptors: Misconceptions, Neurosciences, Brain, Inservice Teacher Education
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Worthy, Jo; Godfrey, Vickie; Tily, Susan; Daly-Lesch, Anne; Salmerón, Cori – Literacy Research: Theory, Method, and Practice, 2019
After well over a century of research about dyslexia, there is still no consensus about how it differs from other decoding difficulties, how it is identified, and its causes. Nevertheless, there is an abundance of research about dyslexia, mostly conducted outside of education, and much of it focused on the brain. This attention to the brain and…
Descriptors: Dyslexia, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Neurological Impairments, Neurological Organization
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Grospietsch, Finja; Mayer, Jürgen – Education Sciences, 2018
Scientific concepts of learning and the brain are relevant for biology teachers in two ways: Firstly, the topic is an object of instruction (e.g., long-term potentiation). Secondly, biology teachers must guide their students towards sustainable learning. Consequently, their own understanding of learning and the brain has an especially far-reaching…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Misconceptions, Student Attitudes, Transfer of Training