Have students write about things that calm their mind or complete a similar web to the one outlined above. Placing just a small bit of glitter glue at the bottom of a paper circle to represent a calm mind.The paper glitter ball can also serve as the center starting point for a web. Having students cover a paper circle entirely with glitter glue and then write about things that cause them stress, anxiety, or fear.What was going on? What did it feel like? How did they calm their mind? Journaling about a time their own brain felt like the shaken glitter jar.Once you have used the visual of the glitter ball, I have done a number of extension activities with students. By the way, for those techies out there, Moody Cow also has his own IPad app. For a great book that goes with this concept, try “Moody Cow Meditates.” Since the deep breathing practice (Brain Break) used in MindUP is not considered meditation, I change the book to “Moody Cow is Mindful.” In this great children’s book, Moody Cow is shown how the glitter jar represents his “moody” brain in the same way we teach the glitter jar to students. Add a drop of food colouring and some dry glitter and shake. In a small jar, mix a couple of tablespoons of glitter glue with hot water (if water is cold, the glue won’t break down). You can also create a more glittery visual by using hot water, food colouring, glitter glue, glitter, and a glass jar. Before I came across Kaiser Greenland’s video, I used the jar of thick oil and small beads pict ured at the start of this post. If you can’t find glitter balls, making your own is simple enough. His thoughts were swirling around and he recognized he was having a hard time controlling it. I remember one of my former kindergarten students, during a particularly tough moment, tell me his brain felt like the glitter ball. Students as young as kindergarten can relate to the visual of the glitter ball, and I have seen the image of the glitter ball reappear in conversations and in writing. This represents the calming effect of breathing on the brain. This time, using our breathing, we shake the glitter ball and breathe while the glitter slowly settles to the bottom. When I teach students about deep breathing, we look at the glitter ball again. Can’t we all think of a time when our mind felt like the shaken glitter ball? I imagine it was hard to focus, hard to remember things, and hard to keep information straight. Information is sent to our amygdala, our flight, fight, freeze center, as opposed to where it is needed to go. Like the glitter ball, the mind becomes cloudy and unfocused, information swirls around, and it is much harder for information to get where it needs to go. In contrast, when the mind is anxious or in a state of stress, the mind becomes just like the shaken glitter ball. If we need to solve complex problems, make connections, or focus and pay attention, information is able to travel to our Prefrontal Cortex where learning takes place. If we need to store or retrieve memories, we can access our hippocampus with greater ease. When the mind is calm and clear, like the unshaken glitter ball, information is able to pass successfully to the other parts of the brain. When I demonstrate how the parts of the brain function in both a calm and stressed out state, I begin by explaining that all the pieces of glitter represent the roughly 2000 bits of information our Reticular Activating System takes in each second. The use of glitter balls came from Susan Kaiser Greenland. In addition to using Dan Siegel’s “Hand Model of the Brain,” which I wrote about in an earlier post, the most successful visual I have found to demonstrate the connection between stress and the brain is by using glitter balls. The key is to provide students of any age with key visuals they can connect to and refer to when needed. When I teach these concepts to adults, I use the same visuals I would use with a class of middle school students or with a kindergarten class. The reality is, we don’t need to be neuroscientists to teach students about the brain or about the impact of stress, anxiety, and fear on brain function. From an adult perspective, learning or teaching anything about the brain seems like a complex undertaking. This is a question I have been asked many times before. A primary teacher asked how to introduce the concept of the brain to young children, or more specifically, the impact of stress, anxiety, and fear on the brain. I was recently teaching a MindUp workshop to teachers in my district.
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