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BRAIN-BASED LEARNING
By Lori Desautels
twenty20.com/@umuller
time, but she is new to her school and the staff is unsure of her complete history. She generally attends
her first two periods only three out of five days a week, and her absences are accumulating. Natalie
rarely completes any work and is quiet and withdrawn. Most days she shuts out the world, putting her
head on her desk, glancing at her phone, or scanning the hallway or classroom windows for any activity.
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The school knows she lives with an older sister and three younger brothers. Her parents’ whereabouts
are unknown, and it appears that she is one of the primary caregivers in her family. She is a “young
who provides emotional and physical support and embraces household responsibilities while also
looking after his or her own needs. Young carers have likely missed out on significant developmental
stages in their own lives. How can teachers recognize and help students like Natalie?
WHAT IS TRAUMA?
As I shared in “7 Ways to Calm a Young Brain in Trauma
manifest as a tired, hungry, worried, rejected, or detached brain accompanied by feelings of isolation,
worry, angst, and fear. Adverse experiences that lead to feelings of isolation, rejection, and mistrust can
be abrupt or gradual, but the neurobiological changes caused by such experiences create a fear
response. In adolescence, this fear can manifest itself as defiance, depression, anxiety, and sometimes
attention to the messages flooding through our brains and bodies triggering the question, “Am I safe?”
Reactions become hard-wired pathways in the emotional centers of the brain, shutting off the frontal
lobes—the part of the brain that executes decision making, problem solving, and emotional regulation.
Our ability to mindfully respond is compromised. The excessive secretion of the hormones cortisol and
adrenaline pumping through our bodies, coupled with the activation of the fear response, can damage
There is a fundamental reorganization of the brain when significant adversity has occurred in our lives.
Just like Natalie, children and adolescents may come to school mistrusting adults if throughout their
development they were lacking emotional attachments with caregivers. These young people have
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Many youths feel the need for privacy and are reluctant to appear in need of the emotional support they
deeply desire. As educators, we have our own histories. We need to be aware of our own triggers and
brain states as we interact with vulnerable youths. To stay connected with a youth is a challenging
Psychiatrists Bessel van der Kolk and Bruce Perry are pioneers in the study of trauma, studying how
past trauma can be retriggered by memories, flashbacks, visual images, the sound of a voice, or
anything that is a reminder of that trauma. The very event that has caused so much pain often becomes
a source of meaning and identity and a place of familiarity, no matter how dysfunctional it feels. To help
counter these reactions, the best approach is to acknowledge the negative feelings and give the student
a safe place for a few minutes, allowing the brain and body to calm down.
I am learning that with students like Natalie, we must create an emotionally safe environment that
provides them the opportunity to feel connected and understood; where “that was then, and this is now”
becomes a primary understanding and motto in the classroom. These strategies are beneficial for all
students, especially those who come into the classroom carrying negative emotion.
1. Begin and end each class with deep breathing. Inhaling deeply brings an oxygenated glucose
blood flow to our frontal lobes. Taking just three deep inhales and exhales calms the emotional
brain and begins to release the anxiety and fear accompanied with the onslaught of past-trauma-
filled memories.
2. At the entrance to the classroom, designate an area with a jar or basket where students can leave
notes with either words or drawings of their feelings. They can choose to share the feelings with
you or not. When we release our feelings and thoughts, we create space in our working memory.
3. Begin class with a 90 second hand massage. Offer each student a drop of lotion so they can
perform this relaxation process. The neuroanatomist Jill Bolte Taylor has found that our bodies and
brains rinse clean of negative emotion in 90 seconds if we attend to those feelings and the
4. Take a bucket inventory. Explain to your students that we each carry two internal buckets with us
each day. One is a stress bucket, which sometimes is so full it just takes a drop or two for it to
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overflow. The other is a bucket of good feelings that needs to be filled by those around us and
ourselves. Which bucket is full? Which feels empty? How can we help fill or empty each bucket?
Students are encouraged to help fill one another’s good feelings bucket or assist in emptying out
the unneeded stress. What are the ways this could be a part of your class rituals and routines?
5. Create trigger lists. Older youths (those in grades 5 to 12) who have experienced trauma
sometimes know their triggers—those sounds, sights, and experiences that spark negative
emotions. A few times each week, I check in with all students and have them create a list of
triggers that can block learning and relationships, and also list those experiences, people, or
celebrations that enhance positive emotions. This is also a great way for educators to collect
RESOURCES:
(http://www.basicbooks.com/full-details?isbn=9780465094455).
(http://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/313183/the-body-keeps-the-score-by-bessel-van-der-kolk/9780143127741).
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