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ratings:
Length:
57 minutes
Released:
Sep 5, 2021
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

We don’t just think with our brains.

What?!

How can that possibly be true?

I struggled to understand it myself for quite a while, until I read the fabulous English philosopher Andy Clark’s description of what happens when someone writes, which essentially involves ideas flowing down the arm and hand, through the pen and ink, across the paper, up to your eyes, and back to your brain.

The ideas don’t literally flow, of course, but the process of writing alters the process of thinking - which is why research has shown that processing traumatic memories through journaling about them is more useful just thinking about them - the act of writing about them changes our interpretation of them in a way that just thinking about them doesn’t.

The challenge with school-based learning, of course, is that it’s primarily concerned with the brain.  Our task is to remember facts and ideas so we can recount them when asked about them at a later time.  Children who fidget are told to sit still, when the research that Annie Murphy Paul cites in her new book The Extended Mind indicates that this instruction is entirely misplaced - fidgeting can be a way of managing excess energy, and movement can actually help us to remember things more effectively than we otherwise would.

In this episode we learn many of the different ways that we our brains interact with the outside world to learn in ways that we might never have considered up to now.

I think of this kind of learning as Full-Bodied Learning, and long before I’d read Annie’s book I had actually developed an entire module of content for the Supporting Your Child’s Learning membership on exactly this topic.  In the module we extend the ideas in today’s episode to support our children in using their full bodies to learn both in school and outside of school as well.

You do have to be a member to access that specific content, but you can get a taste for similar kinds of tools that you can use with your child in the free You Are Your Child’s Best Teacher workshop which starts on Monday September 13.  In the workshop you’ll:

 

Learn how to use your child’s interests as a jumping off point for deep, self-driven learning

Show (to yourself and others!) that your child is engaged in complex, multi-faceted learning

Reimagine what learning looks like (it can be exciting and fun, and not something you have to bribe your child to do!)

Understand your values about learning so you can do activities that are aligned with those values

Feel confident that you can effectively support your child’s intrinsic love of learning - whether or not your child is in school.


 

So whether you’re homeschooling or not; whether you work outside the home or not, YOU really are the person who can best support your child’s learning - mostly because you know them better than anyone else so you can help them much more effectively once you gain the skills to do that.

The workshop consists of one short email each day for five days, access to a supportive community of parents who are on the same learning journey as you, and a wrap-up masterclass at the end to bring it all together where we can chat live about your questions.

If you want to raise a child who has an intrinsic, life-long love of learning, I do hope you’ll join me in the workshop - it’s completely FREE!

Just click the image below to sign up.

 

https://yourparentingmojo.com/learningmembership/ ()

 

 

Jump to highlights:

(01:00) Looking at the idea that our mind isn't actually only located inside of our brains

(01:46) An open invitation to join the free You Are Your Child’s Best Teacher Workshop

(05:30) Learning does not just happen within the brain, but with things and people that are outside of it

(06:44) The metaphor of how our brains are like magpies nest: we draw raw material available to us as resources for our thinking process just like how...
Released:
Sep 5, 2021
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

Jen Lumanlan always thought infancy would be the hardest part of parenting. Now she has a toddler and finds a whole new set of tools are needed, there are hundreds of books to read, and academic research to uncover that would otherwise never see the light of day. Join her on her journey to get a Masters in Psychology focusing on Child Development, as she researches topics of interest to parents of toddlers and preschoolers from all angles, and suggests tools parents can use to help kids thrive - and make their own lives a bit easier in the process. Like Janet Lansbury's respectful approach to parenting? Appreciate the value of scientific research, but don't have time to read it all? Then you'll love Your Parenting Mojo. More information and references for each show are at www.YourParentingMojo.com. Subscribe there and get a free newsletter compiling relevant research on the weeks I don't publish a podcast episode!