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Brain scientists and education scientists don't get together very often, and we end up living in our own little silos.
John Medina
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John Medina
Age: 68
Born: 1956
Born: January 19
Molecular Biologist
Often
Ends
Silos
Together
Scientists
Littles
Scientist
Little
Education
Brain
Living
More quotes by John Medina
Even though we don't know squat about how the brain works, the little we do know suggests that if you wanted to design a learning environment that was directly opposed to what the brain was naturally good at doing, you would design the education system we currently have, not only in America, but all over the world!
John Medina
Babies learn through a series of increasingly self-corrected ideas. They use very sophisticated hypothesis testing strategies to find out about their world.
John Medina
Empathy works so well because it does not require a solution. It requires only understanding.
John Medina
Not even identical twins can have the exact same experiences, and their brains are not wired the same way.
John Medina
Don't start with the details. Start with the key ideas, and in a hierarchical fashion, form the details around these larger notions.
John Medina
The more senses recruited at the moment of learning, the more likely you are to recall it later.
John Medina
Based on research into the Picture Superiority Effect, when we read text alone, we are likely to remember only 10 percent of the information 3 days later. If that information is presented to us as text combined with a relevant image, we are likely to remember 65 percent of the information 3 days later.
John Medina
People try to apply directly results from the cognitive neurosciences directly to classroom practice and I have to tell you I am very skeptical about the exercise. We don't know very much about how the brain works - we don't even know how you remember to write your name.
John Medina
Public speaking professionals say that you win or lose the battle to hold your audience in the first 30 seconds of a given presentation.
John Medina
We must do a better job of encouraging lifelong curiosity.
John Medina
If you are curious, you won't be satisfied with the tyranny of custom. People stuck in that rut might say why? and the first thing an exploratory person would say is why not?
John Medina
Americans have been good at improvising for a long time, but in the last few decades, we have gotten very sloppy about the rote memorization of facts. That's a discipline issue. You need the rote skill in order to have something to improvise off of, otherwise you are simply playing air guitar.
John Medina
A third or more of the brain is devoted to visual processing, not true of any other sense. We have color vision and it is truly binocular. This sophistication is not true of other senses, such as smell, where many genes are actually mutated and no longer work.
John Medina
What you do and learn in life physically changes what your brain looks likeāit literally rewires it.
John Medina
What's obvious to you is obvious to you.
John Medina
Having a first child is like swallowing an intoxicating drink made of equal parts joy and terror, chased with a bucketful of transitions nobody ever tells you about.
John Medina
I have great confidence in human curiosity - even though I don't know what curiosity is from a biological point of view. One of its characteristics has got to be the willingness to explore.
John Medina
The brain appears to have been designed to solve problems related to surviving in an outdoor setting, in unstable meteorological conditions, and to do so in near constant motion.
John Medina
The brain doesn't pay attention to boring things.
John Medina
Any education system that only memorizes things creates robots and will never produce Nobel laureates. Any education system that only emphasizes improvisation will get a bunch of people who may think they are creative, but they are functionally illiterate.
John Medina