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New research on links between reward and learning can bridge the gap between neuroscience and education, offering the chance to improve scientific understanding of learning amongst teachers.

Research highlights

  • Educational neuroscience research from the University of Bristol has informed national teaching practice and education policy, as well as contributing directly to innovative continuing professional development and initial teacher development.
  • Take-up of new neuroscience-informed approaches to teaching and learning has reduced misunderstanding about how the brain learns. It has also raised awareness of the importance of neuroscientific evidence for education among both practitioners and the public.
  • Underpinning research has also informed international educational policy and practice regarding teacher education in a range of lower- and middle-income countries, and is regularly referenced by UNESCO-IBE in formal and informal discussions with policy makers and practitioners all over the world.
  • The notion that neuroscience can inform education has gained global traction in recent years, but there is limited research-informed practice in this area.

Using neuroscience to inform effective approaches to education

Professors Paul Howard-Jones (School of Education) and Ute Leonards (School of Psychological Science) work analysing how ideas about neuroscience can be interpreted and sometimes misinterpreted in the classroom has led to new neuroscientific approaches to teaching and learning.

To improve scientific understanding of learning amongst teachers, Profs Howard-Jones and Leonards developed and introduced new ways of communicating how learning proceeds, and how these may contribute to learner engagement. An online course produced on the ‘Science of Learning’ has attracted over 8,000 active learners, allowing teachers from around the world to improve their scientific understanding of reward and other concepts relevant to teaching and learning.

These have reduced misunderstanding about how the brain learns and raised awareness of the importance of neuroscientific evidence for education.

One participant said the course, “has made me really think about lesson design and for that, I will become a better teacher”, emphasising a material impact on improving classroom teaching.

Tackling 'neuromyths' nationally and internationally

Concepts from neuroscience have also been incorporated into the University of Bristol’s PGCE (Post-Graduate Certificate of Education) programme and Bath Spa University’s teacher training programmes. These programmes reach around 165 and 250 student teachers respectively each year. This work has now also been further extended to support the mentoring of student teachers on school practice, with videos of mentors drawing on our concepts published as a resource for teachers to use when debriefing student teachers following a classroom observation. Additional teacher training institutions have also expressed an interest in incorporating these concepts in their teacher training programmes, with the potential to broaden the reach still further.

Concepts and resources developed to tackle the issue of ‘neuromyths’ are also being introduced into teacher education in lower- and middle-income countries. With the UNESCO International Bureau of Education (UNESCO-IBE), researchers have undertaken work with the Seychelles Institute of Education to incorporate the concepts into teacher education. This is seen as a testing ground for efforts to distribute the concepts more widely across Africa and beyond, with UNESCO-IBE planning to pilot a teacher training course on the neuroscience of learning with two partner countries in 2020-2021, with additional piloting potentially planned for Cuba and South Africa. Meanwhile, the Nicaraguan Ministry of Education has also arranged to introduce the concepts to 1,000 teachers in Nicaragua in 2020.

Supporting evidence-based policy making in education

In the UK, this research has contributed to a policy debate with representatives from the Department for Education (DfE) and Ofsted that aimed to support evidence-based policy making in education, generating “considerable interest”, and informing the DfE’s development of the Early Career Framework for teachers. This work has also underpinned decisions by two UK NGOs to provide large-scale funding to inform national teaching practice and education policy, as well as contributing directly to professional teacher development and informing international policy regarding teacher education.

Alongside this work, researchers have undertaken high-profile engagement activities that have raised public awareness and understanding of the brain’s reward system and its relation to learning, with Prof. Paul Howard-Jones a regular presenter on the award winning and twice BAFTA-nominated TV programme, Secret Life of 4, 5 and 6 Year Olds.

This work has also underpinned decisions by two UK NGOs to provide large-scale funding to inform national teaching practice and education policy, as well as contributing directly to professional teacher development and informing international policy regarding teacher education.

FROM ARTICLE

Connect with the researcher

Professor Paul A Howard-Jones, Professor of Neuroscience and Education, School of Education. 

Professor Ute B Leonards, Professor of Neuropsychology, School of Psychological Science.

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