In this workshop, Lynne Kenney, Psy,D., pediatric psychologist, author and international educator, will teach you how to integrate the newest research in neuroscience, kinesiology and education for kids to learn more efficiently.
Lynne Kenney – Executive Function in the Classroom
WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT MOVEMENT AND COGNITION
- Explore new neuroscience + kinesiology + education research
- Teach children how the brain is built – manage their 3-part brains
- Define & teach executive functions to children
- Embodied cognition – learning is a whole-body experience
- Bring daily physical activity into the classroom
CURRENT RESEARCH ON THE ROLE OF MOVEMENT IN LEARNING
- Physical activity improves health and academic achievement
- Types of exercise that improve executive function
- How to Implement a movement schedule
- Using collaboration and student creativity to improve behavior
ACTIVITIES, TOOLS AND STRATEGIES
Alerting, Attending and Energizing
- March Match
- Find The Pulse
- Clap & Tap
- I’m a Star
- Over the Line in 4/4 time
- The Little Jane Fonda
- Wave Jump
- Switch Tasks
- Clap, Snap, Tap
- Rhythm and Rhyme
- Body Percussion
- Pretend Drums
Self-Regulation
- The difference between self-regulation and self-control
- Task demands and perceived stress
- Stressor identification & arousal states
- Slowing down for better cognitive control keeping the marshmallow in the middle
- Entrainment and Synchrony
- Entrain me (Walk & Bounce with me)
- Co-Regulation – Swing, sway, sing
- Meditation and Mindfulness
- The Music Carpet Ride
- Middle C OHM
- Head, Shoulders, Hips & Knees
- Tai Chi
- Pretend Balance Beam
- Yogivate in ACTIVATE
- Rhythm Ball
- 3,5,7,9 For Calming in Time
- Mirroring with Big Ben
Attention/Memory
- The BIG 3 – attention, working memory & self-control
- Having a Ball!
- ACTIVATE
- The Secret is The Sequence
- The Parts of the Task Game
- Cognitive Conversations
- The THINK Cards
- My Attention Engine
- Play Math
Behavior
- Anxiety, agitation and hopefulness
- What to say, think and do when children are escalating
- The power of self-talk
- Who’s Jelly Beans Am I Holding?
- The Purpose Circle
- What’s In It For Me?
- Anger and Perceived Loss
- Anger Mountain
- My Anger Manager
- I’ll Give This 10
Would you like to receive Lynne Kenney – Executive Function in the Classroom ?
Description:
- Improve how children learn by teaching them how their brains work
- How coordinated motor movement improves executive function
- Close the education gap in poverty with movement and cognition
Teaching students how they think, learn and behave empowers them to play an active role in their own learning. When children with ADHD, anxiety, learning differences, oppositional tendencies and disinterest in school are taught how to be “Cognitive Scientists” coaching their own brains to plan, prioritize, attend and remember, they become more invested in school and motivated to learn.
Taking the mystery out of executive functions by showing students how to learn more efficiently while calming their defensive brains leads to better concentration, improved attention, higher academic achievement and competent social-emotional skills.
In this workshop, Lynne Kenney, Psy,D., pediatric psychologist, author and international educator, will teach you how to integrate the newest research in neuroscience, kinesiology and education for kids to learn more efficiently. You will discover over 30 developmentally progressive cognitive-exercises, worksheets and activities to enliven your classroom. Learn how to improve cognition, enhance learning and empower children to be better thinkers with motor movement, sequencing, attending, self-regulation and memory activities.
Dress comfortably, as we will be moving to think and calming to learn with balls, body percussion, rhythm activities, yoga and music.