Showing posts with label nueroscience. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nueroscience. Show all posts

Monday, March 24, 2014

The Multiple Benefits of Exercise and Why We Need it as Educators.


As educators every school year is comparable to a Marathon. We start out happy and excited for what this year’s race will bring. Together packed in with our fellow educators we rush forward towards our personal and professional goals and aspirations. Then…. just like in a Marathon, we hit the wall and question if we can really finish this race. For educators (and especially those that work in Special Education) that “wall” comes right after Christmas when the 12 weeks of intervention wraps up, IEPs are due, requests for evaluations pile up and parents and teachers start to worry if all their efforts will help that struggling student pass the CRCT. These are the times when we feel like we want to give up and drop out of the race. However, it is at precisely these times of doubt we have to push forward and dig deep. We must take one thing at a time- putting one foot in front of the other until we reach the finish line. How, one may ask, can we do this if we want nothing more than to give up? According to John J. Ratey M.D., the answer may very well be exercise.

In his eye opening book Spark: The Revolutionary New Science of Exercise, John Ratey elegantly lays out the science of exercise and how it can beat stress, lift your mood, fight memory loss, and sharpen your intellect- simply by elevating your heart rate and breaking a sweat.  Exercise, he says, has many of the same neurobiological affects that prescription medication has including boosting levels of serotonin and norepinephrine. These are important neurotransmitters as they are believed to be responsible for regulating our mood and well-being (serotonin, dopamine) and increasing attention and focus (norepinephrine). By exercising we are better equipped to focus on what needs to get done and do it in a positive manner.

Exercise also appears to have a positive result on our ability to recover from stress and bounce back from the biological effects the stress-response has at the cellular level. It stimulates cell recovery, which may have been stripped down from over activation of our “fight or flight response.” This idea is truly groundbreaking as it highlights the neuroplasticity of the brain as well as the ability to activate neurogenesis (brain cell growth). The main player in this neurogenesis appears to be a protein called brain-derived neurotrophic factor, or BDNF, which is known to promote the health of nerve cells. It is responsible for maintenance and preservation of nerve cells. It can be compared to the Department of Transportation (DOT) fixing potholes, paving new roads and building highways in our brain (only much more efficient). What Ratey shows through research study after research study is that chronic stress appears to wear down the cells in our Hippocampus which is responsible for learning and memory. With as little as thirty minutes of exercise levels of BDNF elevate in the brain and study participants do better on cognitive test of memory and learning. Further, BDNF also appear to be responsible for combating the degenerative effects of stress in the Hippocampus that leads to depression and anxiety.



According to Dr. Ratey, adding exercise to your lifestyle “sparks your brain function to improve learning on three levels: First, it optimizes your mind-set to improve alertness, attention, mood, and motivation; Second, it prepares and encourages nerve cells to bind to one another, which is the cellular basis for logging in new information; and Third, it spurs the development of new nerve cells from stem cells in the Hippocampus.”  So next time you feel like you want to drop out of the race due to feeling overwhelmed try to find time to go for a short bike ride, walk or participate in a sports activity. It may give you the energy you need to finish out the school year and complete those last few miles in your professional marathon.

More information can be found at Dr. Ratey’s website, http://sparkinglife.org  where partnerships are being developed to increase the role of physical fitness in schools, hospitals and businesses to increase personal well-being and mental health. 

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Mindful Documentary and more links

  • Great documentary about the work Mindful Schools is doing in the Bay Area.... love the way the girl looks at the bell the first time she hears it.



Room to Breathe Official Trailer from Russell Long on Vimeo.

  • Interesting article about the effects of pot usage on the developing adolescent brain.

  • Here is a great video showing how to incorporate mindful awareness and it links to memory using rocks (This again is apart of the awesome MIND UP curriculum)



  • Are toddlers susceptible to peer pressure ?????


  • Interesting research regarding the different neural pathways activated during pleasure reading vs. critical reading

  • A great quick intervention that I like to use for Anxiety

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

5 minute Loving Kindness Meditation for children and other Links

  • Here is a series of Blog Posts about the Mind Up Curriculum, which I use and love...

  • More evidence suggesting that are brains are pre-wired for language

  • Great advice on how to start a loving kindness meditation with your children... loving kindness meditations have shown to increase people's ability to experience positive emotions and we all know the benefits of Positive Psychology

  • Here is an interesting research study involving implicit and explicit theory of mind... it purports that implicit theory of mind is observed in children as young as 7 months old but is partly impacted by executive processing...

  • Brain scans appear to suggest separable parts of the brain are impacted by puberty (hormones) and age with regards to activity within the social network of the brain.

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Quick Links

  • Stress reduction approaches like mindfulness and biofeedback could be as important to your physical fitness as crunches

  • I appears that Classical Conditioning works while your asleep as well ...

  • It appears that personality traits such as self-control and procrastination may have a stronger impact on grades in school than say....cognitive ability . I always knew that Type A captain of the debate team wasn't really that smart....


  • Exergaming (I guess that's a thing now), you know the whole idea of exercising while playing video games, appears to help task performance in children; specifically the ability to process interference from conflicting  visuospatial stimuli. Practical Applications???? Maybe Dance Dance Revolution may help children become better proof readers.

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Links for the Day

  • The Pulvinar, described as a "mysterious part of the brain" appears to be behind selective attention and how the brain transmits information... Is it just me or does this sound like some doomsday device from a James Bond movie

  • Here are 10 ways Yoga makes you cool .... but if you were really cool you would have been doing Yoga before it was cool
  • In a related note it appears that Hipster Ariel may really be ahead of the curve as spirituality is linked to better mental health....

  •  A new line of Jewish Yoga know as "kabbalah Yoga"  is beginning to gain popularity

  • Yoga and deep breathing being used to fight PTSD in soldiers

Monday, August 13, 2012

Interesting things here and there.....

  • It looks like a light bulb does go off in your head when you have an "Aha" moment
  • A new study suggests that Yoga could help pregnant women cope with Depression       
  • 3 simple ways to relief stress in Kids
  • Football teams have started using Hot Yoga as a means of training
  • Good example of getting "lost" in parenting