1 00:00:02,040 --> 00:00:07,080 Speaker 1: Welcome to brain Stuff from How Stuff Works, Hey, brain Stuff, 2 00:00:07,120 --> 00:00:11,039 Speaker 1: Lauren Vogel bomb here. Considering the popularity of brain teasers 3 00:00:11,039 --> 00:00:13,480 Speaker 1: and brain training apps, you'd think that people would know 4 00:00:13,560 --> 00:00:16,079 Speaker 1: quite a bit about the brain's role in education, But 5 00:00:16,200 --> 00:00:19,119 Speaker 1: according to a recent study, the general public and even 6 00:00:19,239 --> 00:00:22,840 Speaker 1: educators have a hard time squashing misconceptions about the brain 7 00:00:22,920 --> 00:00:26,759 Speaker 1: and learning. For instance, many of the research participants believed 8 00:00:26,800 --> 00:00:30,080 Speaker 1: that students brains shrink without sufficient water and the kids 9 00:00:30,120 --> 00:00:33,559 Speaker 1: are less attentive after devouring sugary treats. Both of these 10 00:00:33,560 --> 00:00:37,080 Speaker 1: statements are totally false, by the way. The brains behind 11 00:00:37,120 --> 00:00:40,160 Speaker 1: the study, published in the journal Frontiers of Psychology, gave 12 00:00:40,159 --> 00:00:43,560 Speaker 1: a survey featuring thirty two true or false brain related 13 00:00:43,600 --> 00:00:47,920 Speaker 1: statements to three different groups of people, educators, the general public, 14 00:00:48,120 --> 00:00:51,640 Speaker 1: and people with high neuroscience exposure, that is, those who 15 00:00:51,680 --> 00:00:55,520 Speaker 1: had taken many college level neuroscience courses. Of those thirty 16 00:00:55,520 --> 00:00:59,080 Speaker 1: two statements, the researchers focused on seven common myths that 17 00:00:59,160 --> 00:01:03,160 Speaker 1: stem from what they call single explanatory factors, that's ones 18 00:01:03,200 --> 00:01:06,880 Speaker 1: that reduce the complexity of human behavior to a single explanation. 19 00:01:07,520 --> 00:01:10,399 Speaker 1: Those seven myths are the following, and note these are 20 00:01:10,400 --> 00:01:15,200 Speaker 1: total myths one that individuals learn better when they receive 21 00:01:15,280 --> 00:01:19,560 Speaker 1: information in their preferred learning style. Two that children have 22 00:01:19,680 --> 00:01:23,679 Speaker 1: learning styles that are dominated by particular senses. Three that 23 00:01:23,800 --> 00:01:27,880 Speaker 1: a common sign of dyslexia is seeing letters backwards. Four 24 00:01:28,120 --> 00:01:32,400 Speaker 1: that listening to classical music increases children's reasoning ability. Five 25 00:01:32,600 --> 00:01:35,720 Speaker 1: that children are less attentive after consuming sugary drinks and 26 00:01:35,880 --> 00:01:39,040 Speaker 1: or snacks. Six that some of us are left brained 27 00:01:39,040 --> 00:01:41,280 Speaker 1: and some are right brained, and that this helps explain 28 00:01:41,360 --> 00:01:45,479 Speaker 1: differences in learning, and seven that we only use ten 29 00:01:45,520 --> 00:01:49,080 Speaker 1: percent of our brain. Of the three thousand and forty 30 00:01:49,080 --> 00:01:53,240 Speaker 1: five general public respondents, an average of sixty percent believed 31 00:01:53,320 --> 00:01:57,160 Speaker 1: these brain myths. Fifty of the five hundred and ninety 32 00:01:57,440 --> 00:02:00,480 Speaker 1: educators surveyed believed in them, and forty six percent of 33 00:02:00,520 --> 00:02:03,840 Speaker 1: the two hundred and thirty four neuroscience exposed group believed 34 00:02:03,880 --> 00:02:06,880 Speaker 1: that they were true. Some of the most commonly held 35 00:02:06,920 --> 00:02:11,280 Speaker 1: misconceptions among these seven or those about learning styles, dyslexia, 36 00:02:11,320 --> 00:02:14,920 Speaker 1: and classical music's affect on reasoning. Let's unpack a couple 37 00:02:14,960 --> 00:02:18,960 Speaker 1: of those. There's a theory about learning styles called vac visual, 38 00:02:19,120 --> 00:02:23,200 Speaker 1: auditory and kinesthetic a k A. Tactile. The vac theory 39 00:02:23,240 --> 00:02:28,320 Speaker 1: suggests that students have a primary way of grasping information visually, auditorially, 40 00:02:28,639 --> 00:02:32,000 Speaker 1: or kinesthetically. The myth is that some students may not 41 00:02:32,200 --> 00:02:36,640 Speaker 1: learn as effectively if their style is not emphasized. Of 42 00:02:36,680 --> 00:02:40,200 Speaker 1: public respondents believed this myth, in addition to seventy percent 43 00:02:40,280 --> 00:02:43,880 Speaker 1: of teachers and seventy eight percent of people educated in neuroscience, 44 00:02:44,440 --> 00:02:48,800 Speaker 1: and of the participating educators believed in the Mozart effect, 45 00:02:49,040 --> 00:02:52,359 Speaker 1: the idea that kids spatial reasoning skills improve when they 46 00:02:52,400 --> 00:02:56,400 Speaker 1: tune into classical music. However, these myths both hit sour 47 00:02:56,480 --> 00:03:01,280 Speaker 1: notes research does not corroborate these beliefs. The researchers did 48 00:03:01,280 --> 00:03:04,880 Speaker 1: find that having a graduate degree, taking neuroscience courses, having 49 00:03:04,919 --> 00:03:08,440 Speaker 1: exposure to peer reviewed science, and being younger all helped 50 00:03:08,480 --> 00:03:11,720 Speaker 1: when it came to telling neuroscience fact from fiction, but 51 00:03:11,880 --> 00:03:16,200 Speaker 1: those factors didn't completely help. Lead study author Lauren McGrath 52 00:03:16,240 --> 00:03:18,920 Speaker 1: said in a press release. The myths that respondence with 53 00:03:18,960 --> 00:03:22,960 Speaker 1: neuroscience experience believed were related to learning and behavior and 54 00:03:23,040 --> 00:03:26,519 Speaker 1: not the brain, so their training in neuroscience doesn't necessarily 55 00:03:26,560 --> 00:03:31,280 Speaker 1: translate to topics in psychology or education. Since many school 56 00:03:31,280 --> 00:03:34,960 Speaker 1: districts put time and resources towards pegogical techniques based on 57 00:03:35,000 --> 00:03:38,160 Speaker 1: these myths. The researchers suggest that this study may help 58 00:03:38,240 --> 00:03:41,560 Speaker 1: neuroscientists and educators work together to come up with cross 59 00:03:41,600 --> 00:03:46,119 Speaker 1: disciplinary training modules that provide more accurate information and thus 60 00:03:46,240 --> 00:03:49,720 Speaker 1: better education for our students and better understanding of ourselves. 61 00:03:54,840 --> 00:03:57,480 Speaker 1: Today's episode was written by Shelley Danzy and produced by 62 00:03:57,520 --> 00:04:01,200 Speaker 1: Tyler Clang with kind engineering assistance I Ramsey Youngt. For 63 00:04:01,280 --> 00:04:03,680 Speaker 1: more on this and lots of other brainy topics, visit 64 00:04:03,720 --> 00:04:17,200 Speaker 1: our home planet, how stuff Works dot com