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Boston University
Two-Academic Credit
Graduate Course
BU COURSE #: SE 590
NO BRAIN LEFT BEHIND:
IMPROVING TEACHING, TESTING & TREATMENT
This course explores some of the new research in the neurosciences, and
in particular what this new research says about the working of the
child and adolescent brain. Significantly for educators, the course
will examine how neuroscience research informs our understanding of
learning as well as obstacles to learning.
The course is unusual for Boston University in that it meets in
conjunction with the "Learning and the Brain" conference held in
Cambridge, Massachusetts, over the period of Nov. 19 through Nov. 21,
2010, at the Boston Marriott Cambridge Hotel. During this course,
students are required to attend conference sessions, as well as meet
together as a seminar, during the conference where the material learned
in the conference lectures and workshops will be discussed. Students
will be expected to have read the assigned readings prior or during to
the Conference and to prepare a final paper in which they will have an
opportunity to critically appraise some aspect of neuroscience research
and its relation to education. Given the compressed nature of the
course, the instructor will remain in contact with students as they
write their final paper. The course requires students to enroll in the
"Learning & the Brain" conference as well as pay tuition fees to
Boston University.
These two graduate credits are issued through the Department of Special
Education, School of Education, Boston University. The cost of
these academic credits (tuition and administration costs) is an
additional $1,325 above the conference registration fee. More
details about this course and a course
schedule are found below in this email. Please call 781-449-4010
x 101 to register and 781-449-4010 x 105 for additional information
about this course.
A minimum attendance of 10 is required for this course.
Preliminary Schedule
Friday, November 19 - Day 1
Pre-Conference Workshops: (Optional)
8:30 a.m. - 12:40 p.m.
BU Seminar Class Meeting
12:40-1:30 p.m.
Reviewing the Structure of the Brain. This session will be spent
looking at some of the major anatomical and physiological functions of
the brain. The session is intended to review some of the fundamental
issues that will be considered throughout the conference. Reading:
Jackson Beatty, The Human Brain. Sage Publications, Chapters 1, 2, 9,
11, and 12.
Opening Conference Keynotes
1:30 p.m. - 5:30 p.m.
BU Seminar Class Meeting
6:30 p.m.- 8:30 p.m.
Introduction to the Workings of the Mind. In this session, the focus of
the discussion will be on the way the brain learns, and more generally,
the nature of human intelligence. Reading: Steven Pinker, How the Mind
Works, chapters 1, 2, and 4.
Saturday, November 20 -
Day 2
BU Seminar Class Meeting
7:30 a.m. - 8:30 a.m.
The Brain of the Special Needs Child. This class time is devoted to an
examination of the workings of the brain of children with special needs
and psychological disorders. The topics will include learning
disorders, depression and mood disorders, autism and social skills, and
problems of sensory integration. Reading: David Sousa, "How the Special
Needs Brain Learns," Corwin Press; and Michael Posner and Marcus E.
Raichle, "Images of Mind," Scientific American Library, chapter 8 and
9; John Ratey and Catherine Honson, "Shadow Syndromes," chapters 5, 6
and 7.
Conference Sessions and Keynotes
8:30 a.m.- 5:30 p.m.
BU Seminar Class Meeting
12:45 - 1:45 p.m.
State of Mind. The final class session is devoted to more general
concerns on the well being of children in context of their families,
schools and broader culture. Topics include the nature of social
bonding, the action of the will, the role of the arts, mechanics of
thought, and the nature of memory. Reading: Rita Carter, "Mapping the
Mind," University of California Press, chapters 7 and 8; Pinker, "How
the Mind Works," chapters 7 and 8.
Sunday, November 21 - Day 3
BU Seminar Class Meeting
7:30 a.m. - 8:30 a.m.
Final wrap up of the class.
Conference Sessions and Keynotes
8:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m.
Seminar Course Information
Instructor: Thomas Cottle, Ph.D., Professor, BU Dept. of Education
Students in this course may meet individually with the instructor
during open lunch periods during the conference for additional help.
Graduate Course & Conference Recommended Reading
(Several readings from the following list will be selected and required
for those in the L&B/Boston University Graduate Credit program)
R. Bandler, Using Your Brain for a Change
J. Carper, Your Miracle Brain
C. Conners, Feeding the Brain
F. Crick, The Astonishing Hypothesis
D. Goleman, Emotional Intelligence: Why it can Matter more than IQ
S. Greenfield, The Human Brain: A guided Tour
L. Hart, Human Brain and Human Learning
J. LeDoux, The Emotional Brain: The Mysterious Underpinnings of
Emotional Life
R. Ornstein and R. Thompson, The Amazing Brain
J. Ratey, A Users Guide to the Brain
D. Siegel, The Developing Mind: Toward a Neurobiology of Interpersonal
Experience
R. Sternberg, Successful Intelligence
R. Sylwester, Student Brains, School Issues
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