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PLEASE NOTE, THE INSTITUTE IS NOW FULL TO CAPACITY.
Please be sure to check our homepage for future events.
Engage in intensive training in
connecting brain and cognitive science to the classroom.
Register for the Learning & the Brain
Conference/Lawrence Academy Summer Institute |
The Summer Institute is for |
- PreK-12 Teachers, Administrators, School
Psychologists and School Clinicians

- Education Professsors
- College Professors
- Policymakers
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You will make
connections: |
- Between brain and cognitive research and
the classroom
- Between emotion and learning
- Among researchers, teachers and school administrators
From
June 22-25, 2010, Learning & the Brain and Lawrence
Academy, an independent coeducational high school, will offer
this in-depth Summer Institute on the campus of Lawrence Academy in
historic
Groton, Massachusetts.
Based
on
cutting-edge findings from affective and
social neuroscience, the Institute will extend the L&B
Conferences, emphasizing the roles of emotion and social interaction in
learning, motivation, creativity and the culture of schools.
The
Institute will
be hands-on. You will
collaborate in facilitated discussions and analyses of case studies to
develop scientifically grounded approaches for understanding and
meeting the diverse cognitive, social and emotional needs of students. |
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At the Institute, you will: |
- Inquire meaningfully into brain, cognitive and
emotional development as dynamically intertwined processes
- Obtain ideas for fostering healthy, enduring
development and learning in your students
- Acquire concrete tools and strategies for the design
of curricula and assessments
- Achieve a new understanding of students’
learning and behavior and learn new ways to analyze what we teach
- Discuss real experiences from your own school or
classroom
- Develop strategies for teachers to become researchers
in their own classrooms
- Gain ongoing access to a community of educators and
scientists working at the intersection of neuroscience and education
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Content goals: Four goals provide the basis for the program: |
- Achieving a new understanding of students’
learning and behavior
- Acquiring tools and strategies for the design of
curricula and assessments
- Improving instructional practice
- Enhancing student outcomes
Participants inquire deeply into brain, cognitive and
emotional development as dynamically intertwined processes; obtain
ideas for fostering healthy, enduring development and learning in their
students; develop strategies to become researchers in their own
schools; and gain ongoing access to a community of educators and
scientists working at the intersection of neuroscience and education.
There will also be a special focus on age-appropriate
curriculum development and lesson planning |
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Format: |
| Full-time
participation and preparation are
expected
throughout the Institute. The Institute is hands-on. Rather than simply
listening to lectures, participants also collaborate in facilitated
discussions and analyses of case studies to develop scientifically
grounded approaches for understanding and meeting the diverse
cognitive, social and emotional needs of students. A full schedule of
class sessions and activities is held each day, amounting to a program
total of 22 hours. Additionally, approximately an hour and twenty
minutes of preparation is required each evening for the next day. |
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About The Institute: |
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The Learning & the Brain Conference/Lawrence Academy
Summer Institute on learning and the brain helps individuals and school
teams develop the knowledge, skills and strategies necessary to
responsibly apply neuroscience and cognitive science findings to the
classroom to improve teaching and learning.
The program offers participants an intensive
professional development experience, drawing on the most up-to-date
findings in affective and social neuroscience. The Institute emphasizes
understanding emotion and social interaction and their roles in
learning, motivation, attention and the culture of schools.
The Institute will be led by Dr. Mary Helen
Immordino-Yang and will be assisted by Alden (Denny) Blodget. |
About
Dr. Mary Helen Immordino-Yang, EdD |
The
workshop will be led by Dr. Mary Helen Immordino-Yang, a leading
cognitive neuroscientist and educator.
Mary Helen Immordino-Yang, Ed.D. is a cognitive
neuroscientist and educational psychologist who studies the brain bases
of emotion, social interaction and culture and their implications or
development and schools. She is an Assistant Professor of
Educational Psychology at the Rossier School of Education and an Assistant Professor of Psychology at the Brain
and Creativity Institute, both at the University
of Southern California.
A former junior high school teacher, she earned her
doctorate at the Harvard University Graduate
School of Education, where she was the recipient of grants from
the Spencer Foundation and the American Association of University Women
Educational Foundation.
She is the Associate Editor for North America for the
journal Mind, Brain and Education,
and the inaugural recipient of the Award for Transforming Education
through Neuroscience, co-sponsored by the International Mind, Brain and
Education Society (IMBES) and the Learning and the Brain Conference.
She lectures nationally and abroad on the implicatons of brain
and cognitive science research for curriculum and pedagogy. Her
background as a researcher, teacher, and mother has made her especially
interested in the connection between learning and emotion.
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About Alden Blodget |
Denny
Blodget is director of Sustainable Teaching, offering online
professional development and support to teachers in their first four
years of teaching. He was a teacher and an administrator for 38
years. He taught theatre and English, created and chaired the arts
department at Taft School (Connecticut), chaired the arts department at
Packer Collegiate Institute (New York) and was assistant head of school
for 18 years at Lawrence Academy (Massachusetts). Since 2000, he
has worked with Dr. Mary Helen Immordino-Yang creating workshops for
teachers to explore the implications of her research for the classroom.
He has written several articles for the Independent School magazine
(National Association of Independent Schools publication) and other
publications, and he continues to write a blog for Sustainable teaching.
Denny has spent his life in the educational reform movement and led the
transformation of Lawrence Academy's curriculum and teaching methods
that resulted in innovations that attracted national attention from
other schools. He serves on the Board of Trustees for The Long
Trail School in Vermont and is a guardian ad litem for the Family and
District Cours of Rutland County (Vermont), representing abused and
delinquent children. |
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Professional Development
Credit: |
| This
program provides a total of 22 hours toward
professional development credit for various professionals. For types of
credit offered, or to find out about additional engaged hours toward
professional development credit, call Learning & the Brain
Conference at 781-449-4010 ext. 105. |
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Accommodations: |
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Interaction between faculty and participants outside the
classroom is an integral part of the Institute. To foster this total
immersion learning environment, participants are housed in dormitory
accommodations on the Lawrence Academy campus. Participants are
assigned a single room with a shared bath. Linens and daily
housekeeping are provided.
The classrooms, dining hall and overnight accommodations
are air-conditioned. A gym and health area are available and are not
air-conditioned. All facilities are ADA compliant. |
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Arrival/Departure: |
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The program begins at 1:00 p.m. on June 22 and concludes
at noon on June 25. Participants may arrive during the morning of June
22 and have lunch in the Lawrence Academy dining hall. Lunch is also
served on June 25 at the conclusion of the program.
More Travel
Information |
Enrollment is limited to 30 participants; please
register early. Cost: $1,975 (ask about our group rate) --includes
registration, materials, fees, meals, lodging and available
professional development credits. To register, click on
“Register” at the top of the page, or call
781-449-4010
ext. 101 or 102 for registration and additional information. For
details and policies, click on
“Policies” above.
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