Title: The Neuroscience of the MentorLearner Relationship
1The Neuroscience of the Mentor-Learner
Relationship
- Judith E. Cox
- Mark Y. J. Wang
- Fei-Fei Hwang
- Professor Gary R. Low
- EDLD 6323 EI An Adult Learning Model for
Managing Life Transitions and Change - Texas AM University-Kingsville
2- Recent discoveries in cognitive
neuroscience and social cognitive neuroscience
reveal to educators and mentors of adults the
neurological effects and importance of creating a
trusting relationship, a holding environment, and
an intersubjective space, such as the ZPD, where
reflection and abstract thinking can happen. If
mentors are to assist learners on the journey
from dualistic to multiplistic to contextual
thinking, it means choosing to be the guide who
points the way through the fire (Daloz, 1999,
p. 244).
3Promoting Development through Trust
- Learning promotes development
- Development means successively asking broader and
deeper questions of the relationship between
oneself and the world (Daloz, 1986, p. 236). - Development happens through discerning,
exploring, and challenging ones own underlying
assumptions about the self, society, and reality
(Brookfield, 1987, p. 134).
4Promoting Development through Trust
- A mentor facilitates the journey by inviting
learners to question and challenge their
assumptions and by providing emotional support. - During the uncomfortable period of uncertainty
and self-questioning, mentors hold out hope by
offering a vision of who learners are becoming
and of how they will feel (Daloz, 1999).
5Promoting Development through Trust
- Learners transitions from (1) shifting to (4)
- (1) only believing what authorities say
- (2) authorities clash and there is no answer
- (3) each truth has its own context, meaning,
connections - (4) contextual relativism, where our view of
the world is transformed (Daloz, 1999, p.
75).
6Promoting Development through Trust
- The first step on this developmental journey with
the learner is to engender trust (Daloz, 1999,
p.122). - The mentor builds a nurturing relationship and a
holding environment, which foster development. - Holding environment describes how the
psychological presence of a caregiver can support
a child in beginning to develop her own sense of
self (Winnicott, 1965) .
7Promoting Development through Trust
- A holding environment enables us to consolidate
each new sense of self so that we can maintain
meaning and coherence in the world and yet remain
open to a lifetime of fresh wonders (Daloz,
1986, p. 190). - This new field of educational neuroscience can
now demonstrate the vital role of a trusting and
safe holding environment in promoting learning
and development.
8A Neuroscientific Understanding of Trust and
Learning
- A secure attachment processone in which trust is
establishedresults in a cascade of biochemical
processes, stimulating and enhancing the growth
and connectivity of neural networks throughout
the brain (Schore, 1994, Cozolino, 2002, p.
191). - Caring and encouragement from trusted others
promote change in these neuronal networks because
the brain is plastic in the sense it can be
remodeled or physically molded (Zull, 2002, p.
116). - any change in knowledge must come from some
change in neuronal networks (Zull, 2002, p. 92).
9A Neuroscientific Understanding of Trust and
Learning
- A mentor offers an optimal learning
environment-supportive, caring, encouraging, and
enthusiastic. - Learners move their thinking activity into the
frontal cortex - where reflective activity and abstract thinking
take place. - leading to greater brain plasticity and hence
more neuronal networking and meaningful learning.
10Social Interaction and Affective Attunement
- Social interaction and affective attunement
processes stimulate the brain to grow, organize
and integrate (Cozolino, 2002, p. 213). - Dialogue, raising questions, can stimulate the
neuronal process of reflection. - Reflection makes neuronal connections after such
connections, we have a restructured neuronal map
or mental representation of the knowledge.
11Social Interaction and Affective Attunement
- The more neurons there are firing together, the
more complex is our neuronal representation of
the topic and the longer that neuronal
representation will last (Shors and Matzel,
1997).
12Social Interaction and Affective Attunement
- These four developmental abilities are the
evolutionary underpinnings for reflective social
interaction between a mentor and learner. - (1) Engage in affective attunement or
empathic interaction and language - (2) Consider the intentions of the other
- (3) Try to understand what another mind is
thinking - (4) Think about how we want to interact
(Stern, 2004).
13Social Interaction and Affective Attunement
- The notion of affective attunement a mentors
intervention supports development. - An educator needs to have that sympathetic
understanding of individuals as individuals which
gives him an idea of what is actually going on in
the minds of those who are learning (Deweys,
1938 1997, p. 39).
14Social Interaction and Affective Attunement
- The brain actually needs to seek out an
affectively attuned other if it is to learn. - Affective attunement alleviates fear, which has
been recognized by many in the field of adult
learning and development as an impediment to
learning (Brookfield, 1987 etc.). - Our conditioned survival and fear responses come
from our primitive brain, also known as the
limbic system.
15Social Interaction and Affective Attunement
- A dialectical reflective process can strengthen
the connections between the limbic system and the
higher areas of the brain these are called
orbitofrontal-limbic connections (Cozolino,
2002).
16Social Interaction and Affective Attunement
- Daloz (1986) discussed the need to help our
students to accept the confusion and uncertainty,
to feel safe with it if we encourage them to
enter the darkness to explore those terrifying
opposites fully enough, there is a good chance
they will begin to move through them on their own
and begin to discern a meaning in the starless
air (p. 83).
17Inside The Brain
- http//www.alz.org/brain/overview.asp
- http//www.bbc.co.uk/science/humanbody/body/intera
ctives/organs/brainmap/ - http//www.bbc.co.uk/science/hottopics/intelligenc
e/index.shtmldefinition
18Creating Spaces of Support
- Gallese believes that an infant andcaregiver
enter an intersubjectivespace (Frith and
Wolpert, 2003). - This space is created by the infantand caregiver
through the process of emotional resonance
(Schore, 2002),or affective attunement. - In this space, the emotional supportof the
caregiver brings an infantrelief from the
intense anxiety andfears that originate from
theprimitive survival mechanismsin the limbic
system.
19Creating Spaces of Support
- Children cannot do this for herself. They are
born with evolutionary physical brain
mechanismsthat enable them to seekout such
attachment andreceive support. - These brain processes continue to develop across
our life spanbecause we continually seekout
attachment figures withwhom we can
engage(Stern, 2004).
20Creating Spaces of Support
- When the learner feels her mentorscare and
support, her fears start to subside. - If she looks into her mentorseyes and sees
reflected whatshe can become, she will
borrow(take in) that confidence until shecan
produce her own. - In other words, mirror neurons willenable her to
feel the confidence thather mentor has in her
and tojoin in that confidence.
21Creating Spaces of Support
- A particular type of neuron,a mirror neuron,
contributesto affective attunementbecause it
enables us toknow empathically whatanother
person is feeling(Stern, 2004).
22Creating Spaces of Support
- Our orbitofrontal cortex canactually be
stimulated througheye contact because
specificcells are particularly responsiveto
facial expression and eyegaze (Schore, 1994). - Caring social signals activatethis higher region
of the brainand promote learner safety.
23Creating Spaces of Support
- ZPD Another specialized space in the mentoring
relationship is the zone of proximal development
(Vygotsky, 1978). - Although this place shares many features with a
holding environment (including being safe), the
ZPD is where scaffolding takes place. - Scaffolding can be seen as a process in which the
new information is taken in, the learner searches
for neuronal connections, and the learner then
integrates the old and new knowledge into a
reconstructed mental representation.
24Creating Spaces of Support
- Creativity or abstract thinking as carried out by
the brain reflects and manipulates (or
rearranges) the reflected information to create
new knowledge or new belief systems. - The ZPD can thus be seen as an incubator of
abstract thinking or creativitya place where the
power of a still tender self can speak her way
into being (Daloz, 1986, p. 222).
25Supporting the Development of Creators of
Knowledge
- How does a mentor lead a learner into the
exhilarating power of her own creative process? - Calling the students voice to emerge is of
central importance, because we do not learn to
speak unless encouraged to do so, or think
without practice (Daloz, 1986).
26Supporting the Development of Creators of
Knowledge
- Abstract thinking can be frightening learners
are afraid that their ideas may be wrong and
there will be trouble if we all have different
ideas (Zull, 2002, p. 179). - With the emergence of her own voice through the
mentors support, the learner can contribute
through the action of her unique ideas in a new
world, feel the power of her creative spirit,
understand the evolvement of the creativity, and
perhaps eventually assist another on the evolving
journey.
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