Friday, November 10, 2023

Should Kids Read 'Controversial' Books

This week's article summary is What Happens When Young People Actually Read 'Disturbing' Books.

The content of books and their availability to kids have always been hot topics, yet with today’s political polarization this ‘culture war’ topic is hotter than ever.

The research study below focuses not on the politics of book banning/censorship, but on how reading these books actually impacts kids. The research study invited eighth graders to choose books from a vast array covering many topics and themes, some of which had adult content.

The research results were striking and probably surprising to many.

Because students had choices, they selected books that were of interest to them. (I still remember in eighth grade being assigned the book Death Be Not Proud, which was so boring to me that it literally stymied my interest in reading for years. It wasn’t until The Exorcist was published that I rekindled my interest in reading.) Students eagerly choose and consumed books that were meaningful and intriguing to them, not because they offered titillating, alluring plots and scenes.  As they were engaged – even engrossed – in these books, their amount of reading rose and their comprehension soared.

As we’ve discussed before, reading is a great way to increase kids’ empathy. As these students read about characters and situations different from them and their lives, they not only learned about difference, they also became less judgmental as they grappled with the complexities of why characters made the decisions (some good, some bad) they did.

Rather than being corrupted by adult themes of the books they read, eighth graders more often brought their questions about controversial subjects to others (peers, teachers, even their parents), seeking understanding for how and why the book characters acted the way they did. Researchers found that students were in fact quite mature and balanced in reading controversial books. Students often contrasted what happened in books with their own family values.  For most, controversial topics and situations and questionable decisions by book characters acted more as cautionary tales about poor choices.

So, like a lot of topics, we adults can often get hung up on things that don’t really matter to kids. We need to give them more credit for their intelligence and reason. Reading has countless benefits and, to me, any strategies to get kids reading more is a boon ‘in my book!’

 Joe

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Lost in the political battles over “educationally suitable” books is what actually happens when young people read. 

One side assumes students reading certain books will become traumatized, radicalized, or morally perverted, while the other argues for free speech and democracy. 

But neither side offers evidence of what actually happens when students do read “disturbing” books. 

In a recent study, eighth-grade English language arts teachers stopped assigning a particular book and instead gave students wide access to books written for young adults, let them choose what to read (or not), and gave them time to read and openly discuss the books. 

The books students found most engaging were those that didn’t shy away from the complexities of being human or the different ways of being human in a diverse society. 

Here’s what we learned. The students, most of whom reported previously reading little or nothing, started reading like crazy—in and out of school—and their reading achievement improved. Students reported becoming better people, a change also noticed by their parents and peers. Reading engaging narratives about characters with complicated lives helped them become more empathetic, less judgmental, more likely to seek multiple viewpoints, morally stronger, and happier. They reported improved self-control, and building more and stronger friendships and family relationships. 

Central to these changes were conversations about the books with peers, teachers, and family members--whoever they could recruit for different perspectives on provocative or confusing parts. 

Parents reported welcoming opportunities for conversations, conveniently through book characters, about drugs, sex, relationships, and depression. The image of young people reading “dangerous” books alone, in secret, and in distress, was not what the research showed.

Students described characters’ questionable decisions as cautionary tales, not narratives to live into. The books helped them to see the consequences of problematic decisions and language. Because they all brought different experiences and purposes to their reading, the conversations were constantly lively, meaningful, even philosophical, and relationship-building. The complexities of characters’ lives and the consequences of their decisions deepened students’ moral thinking while making them grateful for their lives and families. Bad words and disturbing scenes simply fed bigger conversations about life and relationships.

Given the opportunity to read books they find meaningful, students (and their teachers and parents) can be disarmingly articulate about the nature and significance of their reading not just for their academic lives, but also for their social, emotional, and moral development, their wellbeing, and their family lives. 

In a polarized society, these teens’ embrace of different perspectives surely seems like a plus. But there are bigger, more immediate issues facing US teens, among whom anxiety disorders are prevalent. Teens are lonelier than any other age group. In 2019, over a third reported persistent hopelessness or sadness. These problems are astronomically higher for gay, lesbian, or bisexual students. Asked how they feel while in school, three quarters of the words teens choose are negative, the top being “tired,” “bored,” and “stressed.” 

Reading and talking about personally meaningful books can provide a literal lifeline for teens. Somewhere in the arguments about whether books are “educationally suitable” we’ve lost the thread of why we want students to read in the first place, what they, and we, stand to gain in the process, and what’s at stake.

Friday, November 3, 2023

What Kids Need to Know About Working Memory

This week's article summary is What Kids Need to Know About Working Memory.

As we all know, working memory is where the brain stores information for a limited time. Working memory can’t effectively manage too much data, hence why phone numbers are broken down into three larger chunks, for example 404-259-6742.

Like last week’s article summary on metacognition, today’s is a reminder to teachers to help students better understand the limitations of their working memory and to employ strategies to optimize its use. I like the article’s image of working memory as a juggling octopus—even with eight arms, an octopus can only juggle a finite amount of balls.

Think about how difficult classroom activities that require a lot of juggling balls--like multi-step directions—are for everyone, even with an understanding of the limits of working memory and utilization of strategies to maximize it. 

The article provides a number of concrete strategies kids (and adults) can use to enhance their working memory from chunking, which most of us are familiar with, to visualization.

We have discussed the importance of having our students think metacognitively—to think about how they think. Obviously thinking about working memory and trying different strategies is an aspect of metacognition. 

Joe

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Have you ever walked into the kitchen to get something, only to have your mind forget what? Or left the grocery store with everything on your mental list except the one thing you really needed for dinner?

Every day, we encounter the limitations of our working memory. 

When your kids forget to brush their teeth or turn in their homework (that’s sitting completed in their backpack), they are facing the same challenge. 

The answer is not lecturing, bribing, or berating; it’s helping kids understand their working memory and then build routines and workarounds to address its inherent limits. 

What is Working Memory?

Working memory is basically a temporary holding area for our thoughts while we are using them. It’s also where we hold new information that comes at us — data that may or may not eventually find its way into our long-term memory. 

Think of working memory as an octopus sitting in our prefrontal cortex, juggling a set of balls. It can hold about four “balls” at once before they start dropping. 

Working memory limitations are why many students struggle at following multi-step directions. It’s not a lack of focus. Their working memory simply does not have the capacity to “keep in mind” something like a five-step process — unless they’ve practiced those steps so many times that it has become a routine that doesn’t require active thought. 

Students — particularly those who have working memory struggles — need concrete strategies for moving material into long-term storage. Here are a few hacks you can teach your kids to empower them to use their memory systems more effectively.

Teach Kids About Chunking: Try this experiment with kids to help them understand the purpose and limits of their working memory: ask them to repeat back a sequence of three numbers or items (e.g. 1, 22, 3 or banana, strawberry, apple). If they are paying attention as you speak, that will likely be an easy task. Now increase to five items. The task will be harder for many kids and require more concentration and mental rehearsal. Now increase to 10 items. Most kids simply can’t hold a string of novel words for that long in their working memory. They don’t have enough “slots.” They will likely remember the first few and last few words but forget those in the middle of the list — the same reason kids might complete the first and last task you ask of them but forget the in-betweens. Now try giving kids a string of numbers they already know well — like a familiar 10-digit phone number. They will likely be able to hold this number PLUS a couple of items in their mind because the phone number is a single “chunk” and so only takes up one working memory slot. So one way to improve our memory capacity is “chunking”: taking pieces of information and combining them into larger units that tie together. 

Here are some chunking strategies we can teach kids:

  • Group information by type or category: Trying to remember dinosaur names? Try grouping them by large carnivores, small carnivores, large herbivores, small herbivores.
  • Write your notes in different colors: Color can set some items apart. Perhaps you highlight the causes of a conflict in one color and highlight key figures in another. Or perhaps important equations are always written in purple in your notes. 
  • Take Picture Notes: Our brain loves pictures; take the information and draw quick sketches that represent what you are learning — chunking information into visual form.
  • Use a mnemonic device: Memory devices — such as “My Very Excellent Monkey Just Served Unicorn Noodles” to remember the order of the planets — can help the brain store a string of information with very little effort.
  • Turn information into a song: Can you still sing along to songs from your childhood? There’s a reason kids learn their ABCs first through song. Combining words and music creates an instant chunk.  
  • Turn your studies into a story: Whether you are studying photosynthesis or quadratic equation, try explaining it like a story to a pet, stuffed animal, or a younger sibling. Stories are inherently memorable.

Teach Kids to Use (Mental) Places and (Physical) Spaces: When I walked into a seventh-grade class and told them they would be able to name the first 20 United States Presidents in order by the end of our 40-minute class — and that it would be relatively easy — no one believed me. But they did it. I wasn’t teaching history; I simply wanted to demonstrate a technique called The Memory Palace. This strategy taps our brains’ spatial memory — which is fairly well developed — to support our working memory. How does it work? Mentally place what you want to remember in familiar physical places. For example, if you want to memorize your shopping list, you might imagine a banana on the floor, flour and oil covering the kitchen counter, a strawberry in the bathroom sink, garlic in the toilet, and onions in the bathtub. When you want to remember the list, you mentally walk through the house and picture the chaotic scene.

Here’s another way to tap the power of places and spaces to augment memory: Don’t just study in one spot. Move around! If you have a history test on three chapters coming up, try studying one chapter in your room, another under a tree, and yet another in the kitchen. Review your lines for the play while swinging or out on a walk. The physical environment will become part of what’s encoded in your memory, so when you get to a specific problem, you might imagine yourself under the tree reviewing that very topic.  

When kids struggle with memory — from mastering math facts to remembering the steps of a task — it’s so easy for them to feel like something is wrong with them. You’ve heard their self-talk: “I’m stupid.” “I’ll always be bad at math.” “She finished before me — that means she’s smarter than me.” When we take steps to demystify our brains’ memory systems, we empower them to find the strategies that work for their beautiful brain.