The cluster six stories were grouped together because they all have to do with a event, major or minor, has changed the author. These events are completely different from their day to day lives. I liked reading Science Of the Right Side of the Brain. Science is my one of my favorite subjects and I think the brain is the most complex and astonishing thing. To this day we still don’t know what it’s still capable of doing and are still learning it’s nature. I feel I’m more right sided, which is the artistic half of the brain. I liked reading about the the discoveries about the brain in this story. I also didn’t mind reading The Case Against Chores. My moms always nagging me to do my chores, but on the other hand Jane Smiley wasn’t forced to. Her
In school, at the stores, anywhere, there are two types of people that can be encountered. What makes these two types of people different is their mindsets. One type has the mindset of a pessimist; they think they cannot do certain tasks and are afraid of looking stupid. The other type has the mindset of an optimist; they always try new things and are not scared to do so. In the article “Brainology” by Carol S. Dweck, she states that there are two different mindsets that people can possess, either a fixed mindset (pessimist) or a growth mindset (optimist); these mindsets are developed at a young age and will influence a person’s choices and opportunities.
Carol S. Dweck's article “Brainology – Transforming Student's Motivation to Learn” offers insights about student's mentality at school and why some students are better off than others. The article claims directly that students generally have two mindsets when it comes to learning; one is “fixed mindset,” a negative trait, and the other is “growth mindset,” a positive trait. Both of these traits contradict each other in terms of meaning. These two mindsets impact students on whether or not they will be successful on their academic road. In “Brainology – Transforming Student's Motivation to Learn,” Dweck explains how these two traits influence the outcome of having one of these two mindsets through
Brain stem is considered to be one of the most primitive parts of the brain that is crucial to human survival. As thoroughly explicated by most scholars and anatomist throughout the centuries, it regulates the most fundamental physiological activities of the human body which are essential for maintaining and sustaining life. This is how each function is utilized in medical practice to define death through different research and experiments.
I started my education in Erie, Pennslyviana.I attend McDowell High. I would say that we were one of the richer schools were I live. I am going to talk about my first assignment Brainology. I thought it was very interesting and it thought me a lot about how some people have different mindsets.
In the article titled, “Secrets of the Brain” published in the February 2014 issue of National Geographic, we learn that there have been many advances in understanding the inner workings of our brains. One of the leading scentists, Van Weeden, is working hard to understand the connections that occur within our heads.
In the articles “Leveraging the Human Brain’s Hunger for Story” by Doug Rekenthaler and “Brain Secrets” by Lisa Cron both articles provide information on how to write a compelling story. According to both articles to write a compelling story a writer needs to have conflict, a strong protagonist, and structure.
When it comes to the topic of having a growth mindset, most of us will readily agree that students who are praised are motivated to learn. Where this agreement usually ends, however, is on the question of how they are praised. Whereas some are convinced that praising students for their intelligence will motivate them to learn, others maintain that encouraging them for their efforts has a better impact on their motivation.
This video is about The Behaving Brain; it explains how the brain and amnesia work. According to the video, neurons duties are to receive information from other cells, process this information, and transmitting it to the rest of the body. This is done by traveling through dendrites, to the soma, to the axon, to the terminal buttons. Constant nerve flow helps regulate our metabolism, temperature, and respiration. It also enables learning and the ability to comprehend. The brain is connected to the brain stem, which is connected to the cerebellum, which is connected to the limbic system. The limbic system is made up of the amygdala, hippocampus, hypothalamus, and thalamus. The cerebrum is the largest part of the brain, where things are
In chapter 10 of Jordan- Young’s Brain Storm: The Flaws in the Science of Sex Differences, the argument that our minds are not naturally hardwired to have substantial differences based on gender, but that social environments affect behavior is made. She make an analogy of human behavioral differences to the achillea plant, which develops differently based on its environment, to show that the environment can be especially influential in development in humans as well. Moreover, there is a point to be made about how this conversation of nature and nurture should include the interactionism approach: biology and developmental environment both having influence (Madva Lecture, March 8). Jordan- Young believes that the brain is malleable through environment,
In the feature article “Brainology”, the author, Carol Dweck explains that there are consequences of praising children for their work, they is also different types of mindsets that enable a person’s development. She focuses on two types of mindsets. The first mindset is fixed where a person believes that if she or he is smart, they don’t need to put effort to be successful. The author explains on page 3 of the article that sometimes society encourages this mindset by using words such as smart , intelligent which sometimes creates confidence , however, when the assignment gets difficult then a fixed mindset person loses confidence so they stop working hard to complete the task. The second mindset is when a person believes that working hard to
Psychologists constantly offer new testable hypothesis to expand our knowledge on human behavior. This paper will include an analysis of a podcast and a research article. From this analysis, a hypothesis on birth order will be offered toward the end of this paper.
In our second week’s reading, The Tell-Tale Brain, author V. S. Ramachandran has compiled a body of work which spans across decades of research and commitment. The book, designed for accessibility, gives readers of all scientific backgrounds a look into the physiology and processes behind a wide array of neurological functions, dysfunctions, and assorted phenomena. No corner of the brain is left unprobed, no question left unasked. Tying them all together is one question that burns, steady and eternal, in the collective consciousness: What makes us human?
There is always a process or stages in which things works or grow. They starts from the beginning and gradually work itself through the correct transformation or process.
I read the article called “Secrets of the Brain” by Carl Zimmer from the February 2014 issue of National Geographic. Zimmer told of a story of a 43 year old woman named Cathy Hutchinson suffered a massive stroke which caused her to lose movement ability, becoming completely paralyzed, and lost her ability to speak. Her doctors didn’t know if she was brain-dead or still mentally there, until one day Hutchinson’s sister asked Hutchinson if she could hear and understand her and Hutchinson looked up with her eyes to answer yes and to let her sister know that she was still there and could understand her.
You live and you learn, from the moment that we breathe our first breath, we are assimilating and are acquiring information. Life changing and profound learning experiences happen before we can even speak, as children our learning process is grandiose. Harvard University published a series of summaries on Child development. One of these articles mentions that “The basic architecture of the brain is constructed through an ongoing process that begins before birth and continues into adulthood.” ("InBrief: The Science of Early Childhood Development," n.d.).