The Adolescent Brain: Some
                  Implications for Educators©


                              Dr. Stan Kutcher MD, FRCPC, FCAHS

Sun Life Financial Chair in Adolescent Mental Health & Director, WHO
Collaborating Center, Dalhousie University and the IWK Health Center
Academy in School Mental Health: Halifax, NS. July 9, 2012
Acknowledgements


• The Sun Life Financial Chair in Adolescent
  Mental Health Team
• Educators Advisory Committee to the Chair
• Youth Advisory Committee to the Chair
• Disclosures: none
• WWW.TEENMENTALHEALTH.ORG
Funding Partners




                   Kathryn A.
                   Weldon
                   Charitable
                   Foundation
The “Evolution” of the Adolescent
Quite Some Time Ago
“I see no hope for the future of our people if
they are dependent on the frivolous youth of
today, for certainly all youth are reckless
beyond words.
When I was a boy we were taught to be
discrete and respectful of elders but the
present youth are exceedingly wise and
impatient of restraint.”
         Attributed to Hesiod; 8th Century B.C
And the great philosopher says…
“What is happening to our young people?
They disrespect their elders, they disobey
their parents. They ignore the law. They riot
in the streets inflamed with wild notions.
Their morals are decaying. What is to become
of them?”

                        attributed to Plato
Sturm und Drang: the Romantic View
• The Sorrows of Young Werther (Goethe,1774)
• Chatterton, Shelly, Wordsworth, Coleridge,
  Keats
• Wagner – Seigfreid the “classic” adolescent
• Rimbaud, Verlaine, Wilde
• The “prototypic” adolescent was full of storm
  and stress – became the foundation for
  western arts, culture and even mental health
Adolescence – what do we
mean by that?
“Adolescence” – extending over a period of ten
years from twelve to fourteen to twenty-one or
twenty-five (George Stanley Hall)

“The teens are emotionally unstable and pathic.
It is the age of natural inebriation without the
need of intoxicants, which made Plato define
youth as spiritual drunkenness. It is a natural
impulse to experience hot and perfervid psychic
states, and is characterized by emotionalism.”
(George Stanley Hall)

To be normal in adolescence is itself abnormal
(Anna Freud)
National Post: “Ferris the redeemer”
          Steve Almond (April 30, 2007)




                                “Ferris is … what every
                                teenage guy dreams of being:
                                a raging, narcissistic id who
                                gets away with it all. Cameron
                                is an actual teenager:
                                alienated from his parents.
                                painfully insecure, angry,
                                depressed.”
Canada’s Youth
        “The Emerging Millennials”

      Project Teen Canada - National Youth Survey

                             •   Values
Reginald Bibby
                             •   Attitudes
                             •   Beliefs
                             •   Behaviour
                             •   Expectations
10 Things we all need to know about
           Today's Teens
         1. They’re decent People
     2. They love their friends and music
   3. Their tech toys are new means to old
                       ends
 4. They’ve said goodbye to the monoculture
   5. Their ties with parents are the best in
                      decades
10 Things we all need to know about
           Today's Teens
         6. They enjoy school – strain and all
      7. Their quality of life is a solid upgrade
    8. They’re into relationships more then sex
  9. They’re morally flexible, but some things are
                          no-no’s
     10. They’re post-religious and pre-spiritual
Canadian Central Truths
 #1 Value = Personal Freedom

      #1 Worry = Time



                Canadian teens view Canada as
                a place to have:
                         A good home
                         Lasting marriage
                         Better life than their parents
Values
Most important values
 > 80% teens say honesty and trust

Greatest Influence
 8/10 said fathers, 9/10 said mothers
 90% by the way they were brought up


Parent-child relationship
 >70% teens get enjoyment from parents
The Net Generation

Faster more demanding society where being over-
  extended is trendy – MORE TIME!

Prefer Interactive media vs. broadcast media

                    Multi-tasking media

                    Connected, engaged
                    and engaging
The Human Brain:
                  A Brief Tour
•    Brain activity controls everything from heart rate and sexual function to
    complex cognitive activities that we believe are quintessentially human
    (thinking, speaking, and creating works of art). Organ of adaptation,
    exploration, procreation and civilization.

•   Contains an estimated 100 billion nerve cells - more cells than there
    are stars in the milky way galaxy

•    Contains 10 to 50 times as many glial cells (nourishment, mechanical
    support, mylination, blood-brain barrier etc…)

•   Contains > 100 trillion synapses

•   7% of our genome is dedicated to the working of our synapses
The Human Brain:
         understanding thru
         study
         Capability to understand limited historically by
         technology

         Non-science; pseudo-science; science


         Carry our myths with us – in our brain: eg:
         phrenology; ethical reasoning; etc.



The brain is the only entity that is
engaged in understanding itself!
The Human Brain:
A Brief Tour

Modular organ with regional specializations:
combined functionalities

Protracted development (fundamental
importance of the “adolescent years”)

Genetically programmed but sculpted
by the environment: PLASTICITY (thru
life)
We are what our Brain is:
individually and collectively
“The mind is what the
brain does”
Adolescent brain development can be considered in
                three intersecting processes:


• Proliferation (rapid growth of brain matter and the
  formation of new connections within the brain)


• Pruning (cutting away of unused or unimportant
  connections)

• Myelination (insulating of brain pathways to
  make them faster and more stable)

                                          (Sowell et al., 1999; Sowell et al., 2001)
OUTCOME
    Through these three processes (genetically
    determined AND sculpted by the environment,
    past and present) the teen brain becomes:

•   More ADAPTIVE
•   More EXPLORATORY
•   PROCREATION READY (dopamine systems)
•   READY FOR CIVILIZATION TO DEVELOP
Neurodevelopment and
        Adolescence

Brain changes peri-puberty lead to enhanced emotional
instability, sleep/wake/arousal regulation changes, appetite
changes, increased risk/ novelty taking and sensation seeking



         Brain frontal lobe development takes time:
              ”TURBO CHARGED CAR WITH AN
                 INEXPERIENCED DRIVER”
Normal Teen Brain Development:




Lenroot & Giedd (2006)
Zzzzzzzzzz….
           Sleep is very important during periods of
           brain maturation!

           •     Phase shift – lark to owl
           •     Increased sleep need
           •     Increased daytime sleepiness
           •     Less total sleep time


               While many teenagers get less sleep than
               younger children, there is actually an
               increase in sleep needs during the teenage
               years! – (about 9+ hours/night) sleep debt
This can be problematic, because adequate sleep is
 essential for learning and memory development.
Is it the weekend yet?!
        During the summer, teens tend to get the same
           amount of sleep on weekends and weekdays.




But during the school year, teens get much less sleep on school
          days, and they compensate for this on weekends!
                                                      Hansen et al. (2005)
The JET-LAGGED teen?!
On average, teenagers sleep about 2 hours more
per night on weekends than on weekdays.




          This is equivalent to TWO time zones!
                 AND… they do this every week!
Studies show that…



                            The reaction times of
                            adolescents are much better in
                            the afternoon than they are in
                            the morning (lower means
                            better)!



And that students perform better in the afternoon than
in the morning.
                                                   Hansen et al. (2005)
In one survey of Canadian high school students:

     70% reported getting less than 8.5 hrs of sleep per night.
     58-68% reported being “really sleepy” between 8 and 10 a.m.



                                         Percentage of students who
                                       feel “really sleepy” at different
                                                 times of day




                                                                           Gibson et al. (2006)
So, scheduling all of the important
    tests first thing in the morning
doesn’t make much sense!
Teenagers need more sleep than adults, so many teenagers
are chronically sleep deprived.
No wonder they are late for school, sleepy at school,
reluctant to be involved in extracurricular activities
and cranky!
Teenagers show dramatically elevated levels of daytime
       sleepiness (compared to adults).



       In many cases, the level of sleepiness in adolescents are near
       the threshold seen in sleep   disorders like narcolepsy and
       sleep apnea!



       Sleep deprivation has negative effects on the control of
       behavior, emotion and attention, and is a significant
       impediment to learning, attainment of social competence and
       quality of life - ? Risk factor for onset of mood disorders?

(Dahl et al., 2002)
And wait, there’s more!

Sleep Loss Increases Afternoon Cortisol Levels
                                  0.6
 Cortisol Concentration (ug/dL)




                                            Baseline
                                  0.5


                                  0.4
                                                         After Sleep Loss
                                  0.3


                                  0.2


                                  0.1


                                   0
                                         08:30   10:00      12:00    14:00   16:00   18:00    20:00    21:00

                                                                     Time of Day

                                                                               Omisade, Buxton & Rusak, Physiol. Behav., 2010
So what can we do?
There are a few first steps, which include:
   -   Increasing teenagers sleep hours by decreasing the amount of stimulating
       activities late at night (TV, cell phone, computer blue).
   -   Creating a broader awareness of the problem among parents, teachers
       teens and health providers.
                                                      (Dahl et al., 2002; Hansen et al., 2005)
So what can we do?
Unfortunately,
many of the things that might help correct the problem involve
BIG social policy changes:

• Changing school curriculum and policy       (does an
   agrarian/industrial educational model fit KB society?)

• Stopping early start times in high schools
   (some school districts have already done this! – all studies show
   substantive POSITIVE results: less lateness; fewer discipline
   referrals; better academics; fewer traffic accidents; etc.)
Understanding How Adolescents Learn
• Differences in evaluation of risk (decreased
  awareness of probability of negative
  outcomes)
• Differences in nature and timing of
  “reinforcement”: motivation – what it is and
  when it occurs
• Increased capacity for exploration and an
  increased drive for novelty seeking
Adolescent Brain and Risk
• Two different but connected brain systems: one for
  calculating the value of rewards and one for assessing
  the risks involved in them
• Ventral striatum (highly dopamine sensitive): early teen
  development and highly active = bigger responses to
  immediate rewards
• Inferior frontal gyrus: late development (mid – 20ties)
  helps us evaluate conflicting impulses (holds back short
  term reward for more important long term rewards)
• Teen Brain: ascendency of the ventral striatum over the
  inferior frontal gyrus ( heart over head – but both are
  in the brain)
MOTIVATION: Adults vs. Teens
One study looked at the differences in motivation between adults and teenagers.
   The researchers compared the brain activation of adults and teenagers while
                 they were performing the same task for a reward.




         Compared to adults, teenagers under-use the brain
              circuits that adults involve in motivation!
                                                                        Bjork et al. (2004)
MOTIVATION: “Get Movin’ Kid!”

This under-use of the “adult” motivational
system might be the reason why teenagers need
more extreme rewards to achieve the same level
of brain activity as adults.


AND… the difference in brain activity between
teenagers and adults can be even LARGER when
the reward is not instant.
What does this mean for me??




 Most teenagers are more likely to do their
homework for a $5 reward TONIGHT than for
         a $50 reward next week!
MOTIVATION: “its complicated”

There also appear to be differences in the
relative effects of reward and punishment in
youth compared to adults on modification of
behaviors
AND… it seems that punishment may have less of
a behavioral impact than rewards for teens …
AND… it seems that peer rewards may be more
motivating for teens
NOW … what does that mean for educators
interactions with teens?
Opportunities for Educators
• How can schools or academic requirements be
  structured to take cognizance of the different
  type of reward systems at work in the adolescent
  brain?
• How can schools or academic requirements be
  structured to take cognizance of the different
  type of motivational systems at work in the
  adolescent brain?
• Are there ways that these systems can be more
  effectively morphed into “adult” pathways?
  (should they?)
How Adolescents Learn
• Increased processing of information in brain
  centers more specialized to address emotions
  than cognition.
• Greater risk of “inaccurate” reading of emotional
  states of others – especially seeing anger instead
  of fear
• Less capacity for “holistic” evaluation of
  emotional states of others” : nuances in facial
  expression; prosody; eye contact; body posture
Opportunities for Educators
• How can schools be structured to enhance
  development of capacities for “emotional
  intelligence”?
• What kind of school based activities or
  curricula could be used to improve
  adolescents ‘ abilities to experience, identify,
  process, understand and evaluate emotional
  clues (in themselves and others): role of the
  arts?
Brains on technology: environment

• The “Gutenberg Revolution” of
  our century.

• Brain develops by interacting with
  our environment – plasticity,
  plasticity, plasticity

• New digital environment changes
  the way the brains of youth develop
  –digital natives not digital
  immigrants
The Age of Distraction
The social brain
• Changing social environment
   (twitter, facebook, myspace, text messaging, MSN, etc)


• Extended “friend” base but similar sized
  circles of closeness

• Decrease face-to-face interaction or an
  increase in the ratio of face to face and non
  face to face interaction?

• Will current brain circuits for face-to-face
  socializing weaken?
   (social awkwardness, inability to interpret nonverbal
   communication, physical isolation)

• Will we develop new social areas of the
  brain?
Opportunities for Educators
• How can new technologies be integrated into
  schools to promote learning as exploration?
• How can teachers better help the critical thinking
  capacity of the teen brain develop?
• How can the emotional stimuli that drive learning
  be harnessed to enhance cognitive engagement?
• How can school structures be modified to reflect
  the realities of the KB economy rather than the
  agrarian/industrial economy?
Healthy Brain and Healthy Body
• Brain development influenced by: nutrition
  (protein, vitamins, minerals, omega 3) and
  exercise (150 min. physical activity/week)
• Integration of education about and
  environmental richness in positive nutrition
  and exercise may be expected to help
  promote neurodevelopment
• Protect your brain: sports, helmets, seat-belts,
  drugs.
Sun Life Financial Chair in
Adolescent Mental Health

       www.teenmentalhealth.org
Opportunities: Healthy Brain and
           Healthy Body
• What innovative ways can positive nutrition be
  integrated into schools and youth environments?
• What innovative ways can vigorous physical
  activity be integrated into schools and youth
  environments?
• What innovative ways can our understanding of
  how the brain functions and how adolescents
  develop be integrated into schools and youth
  environments?
Opportunities for Educators
• Importance of understanding how the adolescent
  brain works
• Take advantage of its strengths and help it
  develop to overcome its weaknesses
• Develop systems and educational frameworks
  that encourage exploration, innovation and
  critical cognitive development (civilization)
• Provide guidance and support – fundamental role
  of the teacher as a coach, advisor and mentor
Student Achievement: Hattie, J. Visible
     Learning. Routledge, 2009
Student achievement       Number of Studies   Effect Size of variable on
variable                  evaluated           student achievement
Teacher Characteristics   2052                0.50

Curricula                 6892                0.45

Teaching Methods          24,906              0.43

Student Characteristics   10,735              0.39

Home Characteristics      1998                0.35

School Characteristics    4019                0.23
The inter-relationship of mental health
states: address needs to improve outcomes
                Mental Disorder/Illness




                 Mental Health Problem




                    Mental Distress




            No Distress, Problem or Disorder
The End
 Sun Life Financial Chair
                   In Adolescent Mental Health


For more information visit


WWW.TEENMENTALHEALTH.ORG

The Adolescent Brain: Some Implication for Educators©

  • 1.
    The Adolescent Brain:Some Implications for Educators© Dr. Stan Kutcher MD, FRCPC, FCAHS Sun Life Financial Chair in Adolescent Mental Health & Director, WHO Collaborating Center, Dalhousie University and the IWK Health Center Academy in School Mental Health: Halifax, NS. July 9, 2012
  • 2.
    Acknowledgements • The SunLife Financial Chair in Adolescent Mental Health Team • Educators Advisory Committee to the Chair • Youth Advisory Committee to the Chair • Disclosures: none • WWW.TEENMENTALHEALTH.ORG
  • 3.
    Funding Partners Kathryn A. Weldon Charitable Foundation
  • 4.
    The “Evolution” ofthe Adolescent
  • 5.
    Quite Some TimeAgo “I see no hope for the future of our people if they are dependent on the frivolous youth of today, for certainly all youth are reckless beyond words. When I was a boy we were taught to be discrete and respectful of elders but the present youth are exceedingly wise and impatient of restraint.” Attributed to Hesiod; 8th Century B.C
  • 6.
    And the greatphilosopher says… “What is happening to our young people? They disrespect their elders, they disobey their parents. They ignore the law. They riot in the streets inflamed with wild notions. Their morals are decaying. What is to become of them?” attributed to Plato
  • 7.
    Sturm und Drang:the Romantic View • The Sorrows of Young Werther (Goethe,1774) • Chatterton, Shelly, Wordsworth, Coleridge, Keats • Wagner – Seigfreid the “classic” adolescent • Rimbaud, Verlaine, Wilde • The “prototypic” adolescent was full of storm and stress – became the foundation for western arts, culture and even mental health
  • 8.
    Adolescence – whatdo we mean by that? “Adolescence” – extending over a period of ten years from twelve to fourteen to twenty-one or twenty-five (George Stanley Hall) “The teens are emotionally unstable and pathic. It is the age of natural inebriation without the need of intoxicants, which made Plato define youth as spiritual drunkenness. It is a natural impulse to experience hot and perfervid psychic states, and is characterized by emotionalism.” (George Stanley Hall) To be normal in adolescence is itself abnormal (Anna Freud)
  • 9.
    National Post: “Ferristhe redeemer” Steve Almond (April 30, 2007) “Ferris is … what every teenage guy dreams of being: a raging, narcissistic id who gets away with it all. Cameron is an actual teenager: alienated from his parents. painfully insecure, angry, depressed.”
  • 10.
    Canada’s Youth “The Emerging Millennials” Project Teen Canada - National Youth Survey • Values Reginald Bibby • Attitudes • Beliefs • Behaviour • Expectations
  • 11.
    10 Things weall need to know about Today's Teens 1. They’re decent People 2. They love their friends and music 3. Their tech toys are new means to old ends 4. They’ve said goodbye to the monoculture 5. Their ties with parents are the best in decades
  • 12.
    10 Things weall need to know about Today's Teens 6. They enjoy school – strain and all 7. Their quality of life is a solid upgrade 8. They’re into relationships more then sex 9. They’re morally flexible, but some things are no-no’s 10. They’re post-religious and pre-spiritual
  • 13.
    Canadian Central Truths #1 Value = Personal Freedom #1 Worry = Time Canadian teens view Canada as a place to have: A good home Lasting marriage Better life than their parents
  • 14.
    Values Most important values > 80% teens say honesty and trust Greatest Influence  8/10 said fathers, 9/10 said mothers  90% by the way they were brought up Parent-child relationship  >70% teens get enjoyment from parents
  • 15.
    The Net Generation Fastermore demanding society where being over- extended is trendy – MORE TIME! Prefer Interactive media vs. broadcast media Multi-tasking media Connected, engaged and engaging
  • 16.
    The Human Brain: A Brief Tour • Brain activity controls everything from heart rate and sexual function to complex cognitive activities that we believe are quintessentially human (thinking, speaking, and creating works of art). Organ of adaptation, exploration, procreation and civilization. • Contains an estimated 100 billion nerve cells - more cells than there are stars in the milky way galaxy • Contains 10 to 50 times as many glial cells (nourishment, mechanical support, mylination, blood-brain barrier etc…) • Contains > 100 trillion synapses • 7% of our genome is dedicated to the working of our synapses
  • 17.
    The Human Brain: understanding thru study Capability to understand limited historically by technology Non-science; pseudo-science; science Carry our myths with us – in our brain: eg: phrenology; ethical reasoning; etc. The brain is the only entity that is engaged in understanding itself!
  • 18.
    The Human Brain: ABrief Tour Modular organ with regional specializations: combined functionalities Protracted development (fundamental importance of the “adolescent years”) Genetically programmed but sculpted by the environment: PLASTICITY (thru life) We are what our Brain is: individually and collectively
  • 19.
    “The mind iswhat the brain does”
  • 20.
    Adolescent brain developmentcan be considered in three intersecting processes: • Proliferation (rapid growth of brain matter and the formation of new connections within the brain) • Pruning (cutting away of unused or unimportant connections) • Myelination (insulating of brain pathways to make them faster and more stable) (Sowell et al., 1999; Sowell et al., 2001)
  • 21.
    OUTCOME Through these three processes (genetically determined AND sculpted by the environment, past and present) the teen brain becomes: • More ADAPTIVE • More EXPLORATORY • PROCREATION READY (dopamine systems) • READY FOR CIVILIZATION TO DEVELOP
  • 22.
    Neurodevelopment and Adolescence Brain changes peri-puberty lead to enhanced emotional instability, sleep/wake/arousal regulation changes, appetite changes, increased risk/ novelty taking and sensation seeking Brain frontal lobe development takes time: ”TURBO CHARGED CAR WITH AN INEXPERIENCED DRIVER”
  • 23.
    Normal Teen BrainDevelopment: Lenroot & Giedd (2006)
  • 24.
    Zzzzzzzzzz…. Sleep is very important during periods of brain maturation! • Phase shift – lark to owl • Increased sleep need • Increased daytime sleepiness • Less total sleep time While many teenagers get less sleep than younger children, there is actually an increase in sleep needs during the teenage years! – (about 9+ hours/night) sleep debt
  • 25.
    This can beproblematic, because adequate sleep is essential for learning and memory development.
  • 26.
    Is it theweekend yet?! During the summer, teens tend to get the same amount of sleep on weekends and weekdays. But during the school year, teens get much less sleep on school days, and they compensate for this on weekends! Hansen et al. (2005)
  • 27.
    The JET-LAGGED teen?! Onaverage, teenagers sleep about 2 hours more per night on weekends than on weekdays. This is equivalent to TWO time zones! AND… they do this every week!
  • 28.
    Studies show that… The reaction times of adolescents are much better in the afternoon than they are in the morning (lower means better)! And that students perform better in the afternoon than in the morning. Hansen et al. (2005)
  • 29.
    In one surveyof Canadian high school students:  70% reported getting less than 8.5 hrs of sleep per night.  58-68% reported being “really sleepy” between 8 and 10 a.m. Percentage of students who feel “really sleepy” at different times of day Gibson et al. (2006)
  • 30.
    So, scheduling allof the important tests first thing in the morning doesn’t make much sense!
  • 31.
    Teenagers need moresleep than adults, so many teenagers are chronically sleep deprived.
  • 32.
    No wonder theyare late for school, sleepy at school, reluctant to be involved in extracurricular activities and cranky!
  • 33.
    Teenagers show dramaticallyelevated levels of daytime sleepiness (compared to adults). In many cases, the level of sleepiness in adolescents are near the threshold seen in sleep disorders like narcolepsy and sleep apnea! Sleep deprivation has negative effects on the control of behavior, emotion and attention, and is a significant impediment to learning, attainment of social competence and quality of life - ? Risk factor for onset of mood disorders? (Dahl et al., 2002)
  • 34.
    And wait, there’smore! Sleep Loss Increases Afternoon Cortisol Levels 0.6 Cortisol Concentration (ug/dL) Baseline 0.5 0.4 After Sleep Loss 0.3 0.2 0.1 0 08:30 10:00 12:00 14:00 16:00 18:00 20:00 21:00 Time of Day Omisade, Buxton & Rusak, Physiol. Behav., 2010
  • 35.
    So what canwe do? There are a few first steps, which include: - Increasing teenagers sleep hours by decreasing the amount of stimulating activities late at night (TV, cell phone, computer blue). - Creating a broader awareness of the problem among parents, teachers teens and health providers. (Dahl et al., 2002; Hansen et al., 2005)
  • 36.
    So what canwe do? Unfortunately, many of the things that might help correct the problem involve BIG social policy changes: • Changing school curriculum and policy (does an agrarian/industrial educational model fit KB society?) • Stopping early start times in high schools (some school districts have already done this! – all studies show substantive POSITIVE results: less lateness; fewer discipline referrals; better academics; fewer traffic accidents; etc.)
  • 37.
    Understanding How AdolescentsLearn • Differences in evaluation of risk (decreased awareness of probability of negative outcomes) • Differences in nature and timing of “reinforcement”: motivation – what it is and when it occurs • Increased capacity for exploration and an increased drive for novelty seeking
  • 38.
    Adolescent Brain andRisk • Two different but connected brain systems: one for calculating the value of rewards and one for assessing the risks involved in them • Ventral striatum (highly dopamine sensitive): early teen development and highly active = bigger responses to immediate rewards • Inferior frontal gyrus: late development (mid – 20ties) helps us evaluate conflicting impulses (holds back short term reward for more important long term rewards) • Teen Brain: ascendency of the ventral striatum over the inferior frontal gyrus ( heart over head – but both are in the brain)
  • 39.
    MOTIVATION: Adults vs.Teens One study looked at the differences in motivation between adults and teenagers. The researchers compared the brain activation of adults and teenagers while they were performing the same task for a reward. Compared to adults, teenagers under-use the brain circuits that adults involve in motivation! Bjork et al. (2004)
  • 40.
    MOTIVATION: “Get Movin’Kid!” This under-use of the “adult” motivational system might be the reason why teenagers need more extreme rewards to achieve the same level of brain activity as adults. AND… the difference in brain activity between teenagers and adults can be even LARGER when the reward is not instant.
  • 41.
    What does thismean for me?? Most teenagers are more likely to do their homework for a $5 reward TONIGHT than for a $50 reward next week!
  • 42.
    MOTIVATION: “its complicated” Therealso appear to be differences in the relative effects of reward and punishment in youth compared to adults on modification of behaviors AND… it seems that punishment may have less of a behavioral impact than rewards for teens … AND… it seems that peer rewards may be more motivating for teens NOW … what does that mean for educators interactions with teens?
  • 43.
    Opportunities for Educators •How can schools or academic requirements be structured to take cognizance of the different type of reward systems at work in the adolescent brain? • How can schools or academic requirements be structured to take cognizance of the different type of motivational systems at work in the adolescent brain? • Are there ways that these systems can be more effectively morphed into “adult” pathways? (should they?)
  • 44.
    How Adolescents Learn •Increased processing of information in brain centers more specialized to address emotions than cognition. • Greater risk of “inaccurate” reading of emotional states of others – especially seeing anger instead of fear • Less capacity for “holistic” evaluation of emotional states of others” : nuances in facial expression; prosody; eye contact; body posture
  • 45.
    Opportunities for Educators •How can schools be structured to enhance development of capacities for “emotional intelligence”? • What kind of school based activities or curricula could be used to improve adolescents ‘ abilities to experience, identify, process, understand and evaluate emotional clues (in themselves and others): role of the arts?
  • 46.
    Brains on technology:environment • The “Gutenberg Revolution” of our century. • Brain develops by interacting with our environment – plasticity, plasticity, plasticity • New digital environment changes the way the brains of youth develop –digital natives not digital immigrants
  • 47.
    The Age ofDistraction
  • 48.
    The social brain •Changing social environment (twitter, facebook, myspace, text messaging, MSN, etc) • Extended “friend” base but similar sized circles of closeness • Decrease face-to-face interaction or an increase in the ratio of face to face and non face to face interaction? • Will current brain circuits for face-to-face socializing weaken? (social awkwardness, inability to interpret nonverbal communication, physical isolation) • Will we develop new social areas of the brain?
  • 49.
    Opportunities for Educators •How can new technologies be integrated into schools to promote learning as exploration? • How can teachers better help the critical thinking capacity of the teen brain develop? • How can the emotional stimuli that drive learning be harnessed to enhance cognitive engagement? • How can school structures be modified to reflect the realities of the KB economy rather than the agrarian/industrial economy?
  • 50.
    Healthy Brain andHealthy Body • Brain development influenced by: nutrition (protein, vitamins, minerals, omega 3) and exercise (150 min. physical activity/week) • Integration of education about and environmental richness in positive nutrition and exercise may be expected to help promote neurodevelopment • Protect your brain: sports, helmets, seat-belts, drugs.
  • 51.
    Sun Life FinancialChair in Adolescent Mental Health www.teenmentalhealth.org
  • 52.
    Opportunities: Healthy Brainand Healthy Body • What innovative ways can positive nutrition be integrated into schools and youth environments? • What innovative ways can vigorous physical activity be integrated into schools and youth environments? • What innovative ways can our understanding of how the brain functions and how adolescents develop be integrated into schools and youth environments?
  • 53.
    Opportunities for Educators •Importance of understanding how the adolescent brain works • Take advantage of its strengths and help it develop to overcome its weaknesses • Develop systems and educational frameworks that encourage exploration, innovation and critical cognitive development (civilization) • Provide guidance and support – fundamental role of the teacher as a coach, advisor and mentor
  • 54.
    Student Achievement: Hattie,J. Visible Learning. Routledge, 2009 Student achievement Number of Studies Effect Size of variable on variable evaluated student achievement Teacher Characteristics 2052 0.50 Curricula 6892 0.45 Teaching Methods 24,906 0.43 Student Characteristics 10,735 0.39 Home Characteristics 1998 0.35 School Characteristics 4019 0.23
  • 55.
    The inter-relationship ofmental health states: address needs to improve outcomes Mental Disorder/Illness Mental Health Problem Mental Distress No Distress, Problem or Disorder
  • 56.
    The End SunLife Financial Chair In Adolescent Mental Health For more information visit WWW.TEENMENTALHEALTH.ORG