Friday 12 August 2011

Neurotransmitters Pt. 3: Norepinepherine.

Norepinepherine is another neurotransmitter that has an impact on learning. I like to think of norepinepherine as the sabre-toothed tiger neurotransmitter. Essentially, if when our ancestors were peacefully walking through the woods and a sabre-toothed tiger jumped out, norepinepherine (or adrenaline) would pump into their systems and trigger the flight or fight reflex. It would trigger an increased heart rate to pump more oxygen to the brain. It would also be the neurotransmitter used by the brain to focus all of our ancestors' senses on the threat posed by the tiger. Finally, it would create a permanent record of where and when the tiger leapt out so that the threat could be avoided in the future, provided our ancestors were not subsequently mauled by the animal.
 
Thus, norepinepherine is a neurotransmitter used to respond to stress and challenge in a more focused way. Certainly too much stress can inhibit learning. However, some stress, particularly good stress (eustress as opposed to distress) can really benefit learning by increasing attention, elevating alertness, and augmenting memory.

To harness the power of the neurotransmitter norepinepherine in the classroom, incorporate challenge and competiton. Ask your students meaningful questions and elicit their responses. Provide your students opportunities to move, perform, and interact. A four-corners activity where students move to the corner that best represents their opinion about a question posed and then come up with support points to present to the class to back up this opinion is an activity that could stimulate norepinepherine.

Compare theses two methods of review: One is to use notes to complete a worksheet independently in order to organize ideas for studying. Another is to create a Jeoprody style quiz activity based on content to be tested that students play in teams. The second activity, and the test itself, both provide challenge and stress that triggers norepinepherine release. These type of activities contribute to what I like to call "Wide-Awake Learning." They add just the right amount of sabre-toothed tiger to the classroom so that students are stimulated and engaged. In fact, of all the neurotransmitters, perhaps none contribute to fully engaged learning more than norepinepherine.

However, this does not negate the importance of the type of learning exemplified by the first review option described. This option, however, would likely result in the release of the last neurotransmitter I would like to discuss: serotonin. Stay tuned.

1 comment:

  1. I don't actually know what this post is about (I didn't read it, it looked too complicated) but I just thought I'd say that I really like the picture.

    p.s. I fed your fish :)

    ReplyDelete