Educator fatigue and burnout are at an all-time high. Students are carrying their mental and emotional exhaustion into the classroom.
Intentional Neuroplasticity explores the plasticity of the brain and nervous system, while learning how adversity and trauma impact a student's developing nervous system to affect behaviors--which ultimately changes the way educators approach discipline and engagement.
Neuroplasticity is more than the latest and greatest buzzword-when educational practitioners are informed and encouraged to share this dynamic, miraculous superpower of human potentiality, both teachers and children understand why they feel the way they do, and how feelings and thoughts impact their mood, motivation, and engagement. When we empower and relieve our nervous systems with the language of science and deepened understanding of why we sense, feel, and behave the ways we do, we are preparing for a lifetime of possibility through the knowledge of brain and body architecture and plasticity.
With the growing body of research in relational and affective neuroscience, our schools can benefit and serve the whole student as we prioritize the nervous system by addressing the embodied experiences, generational and historical trauma, and the stories they hold.
Lori Desautels is a teacher, not a neuroscientist-she knows that the translations and applications from the affective, developmental, social, and relational neuroscience research are critical to educational practitioners now more than ever. No one could have been prepared for the emotional and social losses, challenging behaviors, and dysregulation that are impacting the well-being of our students during the past few years-our collective nervous systems feel the tension and unrest. Intentional Moving Our Nervous Systems and Educational System Toward Post-Traumatic Growth can provide educators cutting-edge information, practices, tools, and exercises to regulate and empower themselves and their students for resiliency and success!
This is the first book I have marked DNF in literal years. It was just so dry and repetitive. I got this book at a conference where the author spoke. As an educator and psychology student, I was stoked and looking forward to reading it. There were some solid points, but after the first chapter or two it seemed to be the same concepts of conflict (dysregulation due to trauma, specific to marginalized groups) and advice for resolution (coregulation) just phrased differently, over and over again. I would like to have seen a better, more generally understandable explanation and a deeper dive into the psychology of educating and the tools and interventions that can be used to improve educational atmospheres. I suppose that is what I was expecting.
Wonderful words of wisdom influential to all, as we continue to return from pandemic effects. Greater message noticing effects to our minds from our bodies from each of our felt experiences. Excellent packaging of complex ideas. Many thanks to Dr. Desautels.
More user friendly for the administrator or actual educator than the typical school related book about psychology. Wasn’t as scientifically specific as I would have liked, but good references for further reading if you dig.
Although some parts were a little bit technical and dry, there were some very practical and helpful parts. I will definitely be keeping this as a resource to return to in the future.