Sunday, March 4, 2012

Help Your Child Make Connections to Improve Learning

Last fall I posted a series of articles about the brain and how it collects and stores information. Today I'd like to revisit a concept that I first posted as Wired to Learn. The learning process involves the addition of new information to what is already known. Each day of our lives, our brain is continually reorganizing, adapting, and restructuring itself to expands its ability to connect information and thereby retain it for future retrieval.

You could envision a child's brain as a large wall, and each concept to which he has been exposed can be represented by a hook on that wall. As further information is added, it is hung on a corresponding hook, and often connected to several hooks on the wall. The more information hung on each hook, the more complex the child's understanding of that concept becomes. These "hooks" could be referred to as schema, defined as an underlying structure, or conceptual framework. When we organize our educational efforts to work in conjunction with our children's existing schema, we can expand their ability to retain the information ... and to learn effectively.

Another way to 'picture' this concept is to consider how a color printer works. The printer requires cartridges of black, yellow, blue, and red ink (yes, the official color names are different, but let's keep it simple). When you tell the printer to produce a color picture, it will use a combination of these four ink colors, and produce a much more intricate picture than if you were to print it in black and white or grayscale settings. Our brains do the same thing with information - the initial concept gives us a black and white framework, and additional related information adds the color variations to create a beautiful picture that excites our senses. You can add "color" to your child's learning process by following some basic steps as you teach.
  1. Make connections to things your child already knows. When teaching history, expand your child's connections to the information by utilizing maps and timelines to help your child "see" where and when the events happened or the person lived. If they are already familiar with the time period or another historical person, show them how the new information fits with what they already know. For example, if your child has already been introduced to George Washington, he can connect Thomas Jefferson to several points of reference - both lived in Virginia, both had plantations, both were political leaders and U.S. Presidents, etc. And Justin Morgan developed his Morgan horse breed during their lifetimes - I wonder whether Washington and Jefferson had Morgan horses on their plantations?
  2. Use analogies. An analogy is a comparison between two things that are otherwise dissimilar. Enlist your child's help in developing analogies by selecting symbols for different events in time or historical figures. You may want to color code entries on your timeline (see my last blog post), or use symbols to indicate parts of speech that words hold in a sentence. There are a variety of ways you can connect information by attaching symbols or analogy comparisons, and link that information in your child's brain.
  3. Provide content with unifying themes. This is already done for you when using Sonlight Curriculum. Sonlight's Core programs are organized around 3 themes - World Cultures, World History and American History. These themes are reviewed 3 times in the span between Kindergarten and High School studies, beginning with introduction of information (setting the hooks on the wall, or creating the black and white framework) and then adding greater detail and complexity to the information as they visit the themes again.
When you are selecting educational materials, look for programs that are designed to help your child build organized schema. If you are creating your own materials, keep in mind how you can add to information your child already knows. By doing so, you will help him build long-term memory with a lot of interconnected information, and your teaching will be more effective.

Kelly

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