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Interdisciplinary Learning & Using Stories to Teach

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Manage episode 339442915 series 3389303
Content provided by Live It Earth, Blue Netherclift, and David Russell Loewen. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Live It Earth, Blue Netherclift, and David Russell Loewen or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

For more information about Diane's offerings and resources here is a link to an article article and short video

http://teachingintothefuture.com

Story Telling

The human story is our birthright and the means by which cultures across the globe have taught upcoming generations with wisdom and guidance. They are the backbone of human imagination and collaboration; two significant traits we have developed since the Palaeolithic age.

Across time and culture, stories have been agents of personal transformation in part because they change our brains.

Some of us have always known this while it takes others scientific evidence: In 2010 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences study, the psychologist Uri Hasson and his Princeton University colleagues had a graduate student tell an unrehearsed story while her brain was veins being scanned in an fMRI machine. Then they scanned the brains of 11 volunteers listening to a recording of the story. As the researchers analysed the data, they found some striking similarities. Just when the speaker’s brain lit up in the area of the insula – a region that governs empathy and moral sensibilities – the listeners’ insulae lit up, too. Listeners and speakers also showed parallel activation of the temporoparietal junction, which helps us imagine other people’s thoughts and emotions. In certain essential ways, then, stories help our brains map that of the storyteller.

Link for free tips and more about the course here and how to tell a good story:

https://mailchi.mp/teachingintothefuture/how-to-tell-a-good-story

  continue reading

25 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 339442915 series 3389303
Content provided by Live It Earth, Blue Netherclift, and David Russell Loewen. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Live It Earth, Blue Netherclift, and David Russell Loewen or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

For more information about Diane's offerings and resources here is a link to an article article and short video

http://teachingintothefuture.com

Story Telling

The human story is our birthright and the means by which cultures across the globe have taught upcoming generations with wisdom and guidance. They are the backbone of human imagination and collaboration; two significant traits we have developed since the Palaeolithic age.

Across time and culture, stories have been agents of personal transformation in part because they change our brains.

Some of us have always known this while it takes others scientific evidence: In 2010 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences study, the psychologist Uri Hasson and his Princeton University colleagues had a graduate student tell an unrehearsed story while her brain was veins being scanned in an fMRI machine. Then they scanned the brains of 11 volunteers listening to a recording of the story. As the researchers analysed the data, they found some striking similarities. Just when the speaker’s brain lit up in the area of the insula – a region that governs empathy and moral sensibilities – the listeners’ insulae lit up, too. Listeners and speakers also showed parallel activation of the temporoparietal junction, which helps us imagine other people’s thoughts and emotions. In certain essential ways, then, stories help our brains map that of the storyteller.

Link for free tips and more about the course here and how to tell a good story:

https://mailchi.mp/teachingintothefuture/how-to-tell-a-good-story

  continue reading

25 episodes

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