Neurons are nerve
cells. Thirty thousand of them can fit into a space the size of a
pinhead. A typical neuron is composed of a main cell body with nucleus
and two branches; the outgoing is called the “axon” while the
incoming branch is called the “dendrite.” The connecting point for
the two is called the “synapse.”
According to Pat
Wolfe, all information processing in the brain consists of neurons
“talking” to one another. Learning is defined as “the
establishment of new synapses” and the “modification of connectivity
among neurons.”
According to
Cardellichio and Field (Educational Leadership, March 1997),
seven strategies can help to enrich students' environment to help them
make new connections or “neural branching”: (1) hypothetical
thinking; (2) reversal (what happens if we reversed...?); (3)
application of different symbol systems (e.g., explaining the
Pythagorean Theorem in words and pictures); (4) analogies
(looking for correspondences); (5) analysis of point of view; (6)
completion (filling in incomplete elements); and (7) web
analysis (uncovering the complex multiple effects extending from a
single source).
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