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GBL 2010: Compte-rendu de mon passage à la conférence

La conférence Games-Based Learning 2010 s’est tenue à Londres, sur deux jours: les 29 et 30 mars. Comme il y avait des sessions parallèles, j’ai choisi d’écouter la plenière le premier jour, et le Research Strand le deuxième. Je vais en proposer quelques “extraits” et des commentaires. Get the whole story »

Learning & the brain: une série de conférences

Learning & the Brain est le nom d’une série de conférences qui se tiennent plusieurs fois par an, aux Etats-Unis (ainsi que celui d’une société). Les thèmes sont toujours issus de la relation et des apports des neurosciences à l’éducation : mémoire, engagement et motivation, science et art de l’enseignement sont les thèmes des trois conférences de 2010.

Les co-sponsors de la conférence sont des Instituts universitaires américains qui s’occupent de neurosciences ou d’éducation (The Mind, Brain & Education Program Harvard Graduate School of Education The Neuroscience Research Institute University of California, Santa Barbara Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging The McGovern Institute for Brain Research Massachusetts Institute of Technology The School of Education, Boston University; School of Education, Stanford University; Comer School Development Program, Yale University School of Medicine; School of Education, The Johns Hopkins University; The Dana Alliance for Brain Initiatives, The Dana Foundation; National Association of Secondary School Principals (NASSP); Dept. of Speech, Language, Hearing Sciences Sargent College, Boston University; School of Education, Boston University), et qui trouvent grâce à cette conférence un terrain commun de discussion sur la neuroéducation. Sont également présentsla Dana Foundation et Johns Hopkins University, qui ont chacun un programme de financement, de promotion et de recherche sur la neuroéducation (ainsi que des projets conjoints). Preuve que, sur le territoire américain, la neuroéducation est en train de créer non seulement des contenus et de la recherche, mais aussi un réseau de chercheurs et d’instituts de formation pour les éducateurs.

Depuis trois ans, la conférence attribue un prix “Transforming Education through Neuroscience”. L’année dernière ce prix a été attribué (par Learning & the Brain et IMBES) à Kurt Fischer, directeur du master Mind, Brain, and Education à Harvard Graduate School of Education, fondateur de la International Mind, Brain, and Education Society (IMBES), de son Journal et Conférence annuelle, ainsi que chercheur dans le domaine du développement cognitif et émotionnel et de sa relation à l’apprentissage:

The award was established by Learning & the Brain and IMBES to honor an individual who represents excellence in bridging neuroscience and education, that is, applying the findings of hard science, such as fMRIs, to the improvement of classroom teaching and learning. The award will also be presented at the bi-annual meeting of IMBES in Philadelphia at the end of May. The award was presented by Dr. Kenneth Kosik, co-director of the Neuroscience Research Institute at the University of California at Santa Barbara. Dr. Kosik said, “More than a decade ago when we founded the Learning & the Brain conference, Kurt Fischer was already thinking about linking education and neuroscience. This award recognizes his steadfast vision that neuroscience research can enhance education in our schools.

Portraits robot

L’équipe Compas est heureuse de collaborer avec l’équipe des projets scolaires du Cube, le centre de création numérique d’Issy-les-Moulineaux à un projet innovant avec 5 classes de la Communauté d’Agglomération Grand Paris Seine Ouest.

Le projet se nomme Portrait(s) Robot(s) et consiste en effet à… apporter des robots dans les écoles.

Nous avons beaucoup apprécié le fait que le projet ait démarré avec une activité portant un titre en l’apparence contradictoire : “art et robotique“. Qu’est-ce que l’art a à voir avec la robotique, symbole le plus extrême de la technologie moderne?

Pour répondre, il convient d’abord de citer le travail de Seymour Papert, Mitchell Resnick, et leurs collègues impliqués dans le développement de projets de robotique avec Lego, tortues virtuelles et réelles, au MIT. Dans le texte Rethinking robotics: Learning through creative engineering (signé par Margaret Pezalla-Granlund, Science Museum of MN Natalie Rusk, MIT Media Lab Mitchel Resnick, MIT Media Lab Robbie Berg, Wellesley College) on lit:

An engineering assignment typically consists of a problem to solve, such as dropping a box without breaking the egg inside. We have found that many young people become more engaged if they learn engineering concepts in the process of creating interdisciplinary projects that combine art and engineering – for example, designing a painting m chine, building a machine that can read and play music, or maki user- programmable water fountain. ”

En d’autres termes, s’il s’agit de communiquer aux jeunes étudiants le plaisir que la robotique peut procurer en tant qu’activité d’apprentissage de concepts d’ingénierie. Les tâches créatives et artistiques ne peuvent alors qu’accroître la motivation. Or ce plaisir est important, parce qu’en construisant ou en programmant son robot on apprend en réalité beaucoup plus qu’il n’y paraît. Voilà, peut-être, pourquoi la robotique devient de plus en plus populaire à l’école :

In recent years, robotics has become increasingly popular as an educational activity. At both the college and pre-college level, a growing number of schools and other educational organizations are offering opportunities for young people to build their own computer-controlled robots. In the process of designing and programming robots, students learn important engineering, math, and computer science concepts. However, a gender gap exists. Robotics tends to attract a much higher percentage of boys than girls, particularly in free-choice learning environments such as after-school programs and mu- seum classes. expression – while still maintaining the motivational benefits of a public display of projects.”

C’est la leçon qu’il faut tirer de l’utilisation des produits comme Lego Mindstorms. Un projet scolaire innovant vient d’être signé en Italie : 12 écoles (instituts professionnels) du Piemonte (Piemont) verront se mettre en place des activités de robotique (plus précisément l’installation de salles de robotique). La robotique y est considérée en même temps comme un objectif en soi et comme un moyen de motiver les étudiants et de leur permettre d’apprendre tout en manipulant.

Mais on ne doit pas s’arrêter là dans la recherche des rapports entre la robotique et l’art, comme le montre une création du MIT Kindergarten: Cricket

We have been developing a new technology, called the Cricket, that is designed explicitly to support artistic invention. Cricket kits include multi-color lights and sound devices that can be programmed to create animal sounds, rhythms, and musical notes. The goal of this work is to expand the range of what people can design, create, and learn.

De la même manière que les sets Lego Mindstorms sont conçus pour permettre à des jeunes créatifs de construire leur robot, de le programmer pour qu’il explore son environnement et puisse y agir, les Crickets sont des dispositifs programmables qui permettent de créer des objets artistiques, des objets qui tournent, émettent des sons et des lumières, pour créer des sculptures musicales, ou dansantes, et tout ce que la fantaisie des enfants peut inventer à partir de senseurs, moteurs…

Crickets are small programmable devices that can make things spin, light up, and play music. You can plug lights, motors, and sensors into a Cricket, then write computer programs to tell them how to react and behave. With Crickets, you can create musical sculptures, interactive jewelry, dancing creatures, and other artistic inventions — and learn important math, science, and engineering ideas in the process.

La rencontre de l’art et de la robotique est donc tout à fait possible. Ces deux domaines possède des éléments cruciaux qui leur sont commun : la création et l’apprentissage à travers la création.

Revenons donc au projet du cube et à son robot : Spykee. La meilleure manière pour apprendre à le connaître est celle de regarder comment les enfants des 5 écoles impliqués l’ont décrit, et en ont représenté les fonctions (de manière très créative) aidés par leurs enseignants et par Veha Balian, animatrice du Cube:

Et voici ce que le robot Spykee fera cette année en classe:

Bonjour nous sommes la classe de CM1C de l’école Jules Ferry notre robot s’appelle Graine d’espion. Nous l’avons emmené dans plusieurs classes de CM2 en leur faisant croire qu’il était un nouvel élève puni de notre classe, nous avions enregistré le texte avec l’ordinateur comme des pros ! Nous avons testé jusqu’où notre cher robot pouvait aller : jusqu’au rez-de-chaussée ! Il peut donc se promener sur plusieurs étages, car notre classe se trouve au troisième étage ! Nous préparons un projet à l’occasion des 100 ans de notre école, nous allons travailler sur la musique de 1910 !

Bonjour nous sommes la classe de cm2 de l’école du Centre à Vanves. Notre robot s’appelle Greenspy, nous avons la chance d’être provisoirement dans le parc du lycée Michelet durant les travaux dans notre école. Nous avons tenté d’effrayer la classe de CP voisine en téléguidant Greenspy et en le faisant ricaner. Nous avons aussi pris des photos et des vidéos en groupes. En filmant, nous avons déformé des visages. Notre projet de classe est une pièce de théâtre qui rassemble différentes histoires de Nasreddine Hodja, personnage traditionnel de contes arabes. Greenspy y interviendra !”

“(Ville d’Avray) Bonjour à tous notre robot s’appelle Rombot, il a visité les couloirs de notre école et a rendu visite à une classe de CP les enfants ébahis voulaient le toucher ! Notre projet de classe sera un spectacle musical sur Claude Nougaro. Nous sommes en train de ré-écrire les paroles de sa chanson : »Tu verras ». Un couplet sera destiné au robot qui participera au spectacle !”

“Bonjour, ici la classe de cm1b de l’école Ferdinand Buisson à Chaville, nous sommes allés voir la carte interactive du projet sur le blog qui nous a montré l’emplacement des villes où se situent les autres classes et leurs robots. Notre robot s’appelle Clownespion … Notre projet de classe est : Géométrie 3D avec des Cubes Soma ! Nous allons faire des constructions avec des cubes avec la classe de CE2a. Notre robot aura pour mission d’aller dans les deux classes et de vérifier que les constructions soient correctement faites ! Il pourra également circuler à l’intérieur de nos constructions s’il en a envie !”

“Bonjour, nous sommes la classe de CM2a de l’école Maritain Renan à Meudon.
Notre robot s’appelle Espionator. Nous l’avons guidé dans la salle des maîtres. Ses sons ont effrayé la gardienne de l’école !… Notre projet de l’année sera sur le cinéma, nous tournerons un film avec la classe de CE1. Les thèmes seront : le western est d’autres encore… Nous donnerons un rôle à Espionator…”

Grâce à son partenariat avec le Cube, le Groupe Compas pourra suivre ce projet de près, et continuer à observer l’action… des robots en classe.

Idéologies pédagogiques en France et aux Etats-Unis. Entretien avec Denis Meuret

(Cet entretien est paru la première fois le 22 décembre 2009 sur le Journal des TICE.

Denis Meuret - © Sophie Meuret

Denis Meuret est professeur en Sciences de l’Education à l’Université de Bourgogne et chercheur à l’IREDU (Institut de Recherche en Education) – CNRS, Dijon. Il est aussi membre senior de l’IUF (Institut Universitaire de France). Denis Meuret est l’auteur de plusieurs ouvrages sur l’éducation, dont Améliorer l’école (PUF, 2006) avec Gaëtane Chapelle, Gouverner l’école : une comparaison France-Etats Unis (PUF, 2007), Les sentiments de justice à et sur l’école (De Boek, 2009) avec Marie Duru-Bellat.

EP : Vous êtes l’auteur d’un livre qui compare les modèles scolaires français et américains, en remontant aux origines avec d’un côté Rousseau et Durkheim et de l’autre Locke et Dewey. Quelles sont, en pratique, les différences fondamentales entre ces deux systèmes, ces deux « visions » ?

Denis Meuret : La différence qui me semble peut être la plus importante est le fait que notre système est structuré par des hiérarchies binaires (redoublement ou non ; enseignement professionnel ou enseignement général ; grandes écoles ou universités) tandis que le système américain est structuré par des hiérarchies continues (des écoles, des universités plus ou moins prestigieuses et exigeantes).

Je vois une conséquence directe de la différence entre ces deux modèles d’éducation. Pour le modèle américain d’école démocratique, fortement influencé par la pensée de Dewey, l’école vise à améliorer la capacité des individus à contribuer à la richesse et à la diversité des échanges sociaux, tandis que pour le modèle français, l’école vise à faire échapper les individus de leurs représentations erronnées et de leurs « désirs sans frein » (Durkheim), de sorte que se joue à chaque étape et pour chacun le fait d’y être arrivé ou non.

Si on veut, on a d’un côté une logique d’amélioration et de l’autre une logique du passage du mauvais au bon côté. Chaque discipline, en France, prétend que chacun de ses apports, à chaque niveau, est nécessaire pour accéder à la citoyenneté, à la lumière. Plusieurs conséquences à cela :

  1. une surestimation de l’écart entre les compétences moyennes des élèves de deux niveaux successifs (entre la sixième et la cinquième, par exemple), qui explique en partie l’attachement au redoublement ;
  2. une plus grande difficulté à considérer que si l’élève n’y arrive pas aujourd’hui, qu’il y arrivera peut être demain, le jour « où il se décidera à travailler », et qu’il faut donc préserver ses chances d’y parvenir ;
  3. enfin, une plus grande propension de chaque discipline à considérer que toute baisse de ses horaires est une catastrophe pour la société. En effet, le caractère binaire atteint aussi les disciplines : soit elles sont nécessaires pour accéder à la citoyenneté, soit elles ne le sont pas. Forcément, toute remise en cause de chacune est vécue par ses représentants comme le fait qu’on la fait passer de la première à la seconde catégorie, ce qui signifie, dans le modèle français, qu’elle passe du tout au rien.

EP : Quel est votre point de vue sur le « socle commun » ? Quel est sa signification dans le système français ? Doit-il évoluer pour intégrer de nouvelles connaissances et compétences ?

DM : J’ai écrit il y a longtemps que puisque la société tire de grands bénéfices de sa complexité croissante, elle doit donner à chacun de ses enfants les capacités d’affronter cette complexité, ce qui me rangeait parmi les partisans de ce qu’on appelle maintenant « le socle commun ».

Toutefois, ce qu’on propose sous ce terme relève d’une autre logique : le socle tel que « ciment de la nation », le socle comme « culture commune », au sens de « ce qu’il est nécessaire de maîtriser pour être un citoyen » ; ce qui est d’ailleurs logique dans un modèle où le rôle de l’école est de transformer des barbares en citoyens.

Cette logique est perverse car elle pousse à adopter un niveau très exigeant pour le socle (est-on bien sûr qu’on est un citoyen à part entière en-dessous de l’agrégation ?) et à aggraver les conséquences symboliques du fait de ne pas arriver à le maîtriser. Si les mots ont un sens, celui qui ne maîtrisera pas le socle-ciment ne sera pas lié aux autres par le partage de la culture commune et ne sera donc pas un citoyen. Vu le niveau d’exigence actuel du socle, il est probable qu’entre 30 à 50% des élèves auront, en fin de collège, le choix entre penser qu’ils ne méritent pas d’être des citoyens ou penser que, une fois de plus, les grands discours des élites n’ont rien à voir avec la réalité, ce qui est presqu’aussi ennuyeux.

Je suis donc en faveur, en m’appuyant sur l’idée que l’école améliore les capacités civiques mais ne confère pas la qualité de citoyen, d’un socle bien moins exigeant en terme de niveau, mais à partir duquel on se donne réellement les moyens pour faire accéder tous les élèves.

EP: Venons-en maintenant à un thème qui vous est cher, lié à vos travaux sur les outils d’évaluation des systèmes scolaires. Comment expliquer que certains enseignants du système américain (soumis à la philosophie et à la pratique de l‘accountability’ et de l‘evaluation’ dans le cadre de l’action No Child Left Behind) trichent ? Quelles réformes cette philosophie de l’évaluation impliquerait-elle en France ?

DM: Certains enseignants américains trichent parce que ce sont les enseignants qui sont jugés pour les résultats de leurs élèves. C’est pour la même raison que des élèves, des étudiants français par exemple, trichent aux examens où ils sont jugés. Dans les deux cas, il faut compter sur le sens moral des agents pour que les tricheurs ne soient pas trop nombreux et prévoir des mécanismes de surveillance pour ceux qui sont dépourvus dudit sens moral.

Les systèmes fondés sur la responsabilité sont particulièrement difficiles à mettre en oeuvre en France. Ils semblent pourtant donner de bons résultats, notamment en ce qui concerne les performances des élèves faibles et sans doute aussi le professionnalisme des enseignants. En arrivant à mettre en place un tel système, on aboutirait à un accord (a) ostensible des partis politiques sur ce thème de façon à lui conférer une légitimité politique forte (la loi NCLB, aux Etats-Unis, a été une loi bipartisane) et (b) un vrai accord entre les enseignants sur les objectifs qui seraient fixés, ce qui exige évidemment la participation des enseignants à leur élaboration, en insistant sur leur pertinence et leur réalisme.

ESRC: Neuroscience and education

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ESRC, le « Economic and Social Research Council », est une organisation indépendante créée par le Royal charter et financé par le “Department for business, innovation and skills” du gouvernement britannique. C’est ce centre qui est chargé de financer la recherche dans les domaines sociaux et économiques.

Il prend en charge, entre autres choses, les thèmes de la connaissance, des technologies et de l’apprentissage. C’est dans ce cadre qu’un rapport sur les neurosciences et l’éducation a été publié :

TLRP-ESRC (2008). Neuroscience and Education: Issues and opportunities. A commentary of  the Teaching and Learning Research Programme.

Ce texte faite suite à un rapport commandité aux scientifiques Uta Frith et Susan-Jane Bakemore en 1999 et achevé en 2000 :

Blakemore,S-J., Frith,U. (2000). The implications of recent developments in neuroscience for research on teaching and learning. Report compiled for the ESRC Teaching and Learning Research Programme.

Les deux textes se composent d’une partie “programmatique” qui décrit les relations qui existent entre les neurosciences et l’éducation et les scénarios futurs de collaboration possible (et souhaitée), et d’une partie “d’état de l’art” en neurosciences qui concerne les contenus de la recherche qui peuvent trouver une application pratique dans le domaine de l’éducation.

Etudions ces deux thèmes plus en détail :

http://www.groupe-compas.net/wp-includes/js/tinymce/plugins/wordpress/img/trans.gif

1) TLRP-ESRC (2008). Neuroscience and Education: Issues and opportunities. A commentary of  the Teaching and Learning Research Programme.

Le texte est le résultat d’une série de séminaires portant sur les neurosciences et l’éducation (Collaborative Frameworks in neuroscience and education) conduites par TLRP-ESRC jusqu’à 2006.

L’auteur est Paul Howard-Jones (Graduate School of Education, University of Bristol) “on behalf of TLRP Seminar Series core team, with contributions from Andrew Pollard, Sarah-Jayne Blakemore, Peter Rogers, Usha Goswami, Brian Butterworth, Eric Taylor, Aaron Williamon, John Morton and Liane Kaufmann”.

Improving education is a national priority for the UK. In this Commentary, we explore the scope for our emerging knowledge of the working of the brain to contribute to better educational outcomes, especially for children. This publication unites two of the Economic and Social Research Council’s principal concerns. One is for education. The Teaching and Learning Research Programme is the ESRC’s largest research initiative. It is dedicated to performing excellent research that leads to better education for people at all stages of life. From its inception, it has promoted discussion of the link between education and neuroscience.

In this publication, the latest in a series of TLRP Commentaries, researchers supported by the TLRP point to a range of issues at the junction between neuroscience and education. As they say, the brain is the principal organ involved in learning. It is natural that our increased knowledge of its working can inform educational practice. But as they also make clear, attempts to introduce neuroscience approaches into the classroom have to date been of mixed quality. Often they have relied too little upon research evidence and too much on impressive-sounding but scientifically questionable formulae.

L’auteur réclame donc un dialogue plus étroit soit établi entre les neurosciences et le monde de l’éducation afin de produire un langage commun et donc accéder à une compréhension partagée de l’apprentissage ; afin également d’augmenter le nombre des recherches sciences cognitives qui concernent l’apprentissage, de développer des lieux de discussion qui permettraient d’identifier les connaissances utilisables, les neuromythes et l’orientation des futures recherches.

Dans la préface l’auteur indique brièvement les trois étapes nécessaires à ce que l’éventualité d’un parcours conjoint entre l’éducation et les neurosciences gagne en intérêt (au niveau européen):

in 2000, Professor Uta Frith and her colleague Dr Sarah-Jayne Blakemore completed a commission by the Teaching and Learning Research Programme (TLRP) to review neuroscientific findings that might be of relevance to educators. This review attacked a number of ‘neuromyths’, including those concerning critical periods for educational development, and highlighted new areas of potential interest to educators such as the role of innate mathematical abilities, visual imagery, implicit processes, and sleep in learning. … In 1999, as the Blakemore and Frith report was being commissioned in the UK, the supranational project on ‘Learning Sciences and Brain Research’ was being launched by the Centre for Educational Research and Innovation (CERI) at the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). The first phase of the project (1999-2002) brought together international researchers to review the potential implications of recent research findings in brain research for policy-makers, with a second phase (2002-2006) channelling its activities into three significant areas, Literacy, Numeracy and Lifelong Learning. This OECD project revealed the high level of international interest in developing a dialogue between neuroscience and education, as well as highlighting the diversity of approaches across the world7. In April 2005, the TLRP began its second initiative in this area, by commissioning the seminar series ‘Collaborative Frameworks in Neuroscience and Education’, upon which this commentary is based.”

Un élément central de la publication  réside dans la volonté de démasquer les mythologies (que nous pouvons appeler neuromythes) qui sont responsables des résultats pour l’instant contrastés de l’application des neurosciences à l’éducation.

In a recent survey of teachers, almost 90 per cent thought that a knowledge of the brain was important, or very important, in the design of educational programmes. Indeed, for at least two decades, educational programmes claiming to be ‘brain-based’ have been flourishing in the UK. Unfortunately, these programmes have usually been produced without the involvement of neuroscientific expertise, are rarely evaluated in their effectiveness and are often unscientific in their approach. Perhaps this is unsurprising since, although the central role of the brain in learning may appear self-evident, formal dialogue between neuroscience and education is a relatively new phenomenon. ” (p. 4)

Le texte passe en revue des “indications pédagogiques” et leur éventuel corrélat scientifique, ou neuromythe :

- Quand doit-on commencer à éduquer? Est-ce qu’il faut commencer le plus tôt possible? Les fondements scientifiques qui permettraient de répondre “oui” sont en réalité des neuromythes liés à l’idée selon laquelle la synaptogénèse et l’élimination des synapses non utilisées est un phénomène précoce. Si cela est vrai, il est également vrai que les deux phénomènes continuent, peut-être de manière moins importante, par la suite, et que les études sur ces phénomènes concernent surtout les primates. Une deuxième idée impliquée est celle de la période critique : lorsque celle-ci est dépassée, un certain apprentissage ne serait plus possible. Il s’agit en réalité de périodes sensibles, et elles concernent surtout la vision, la mémoire et le mouvement. La troisième idée en question est celle concernant le rôle positif que joue un environnement riche en ce qui concerne la synaptogénèse et l’apprentissage : des expériences conduites sur des rats montrent plutôt que des environnements appauvris ont un effet négatif, car les rats dont l’environnement est qualifié d’enrichi vivaient dans un environnement normal.

Si la période qui s’étend entre 0 et 3 ans est importante pour l’apprentissage, il y va de même pour l’adolescence : le cerveau se développe au cours de l’adolescence et dans les aires frontales et pariétales la sélection des neurones ne commence pas avant la puberté. C’est à la même période qu’on attribue la myelinisation et donc l’amélioration de la capacité de conduction du signal des neurones de ces aires ; myelinisation qui continue d’ailleurs à l’âge adulte, en améliorant la capacité de ces aires cérébrales à “communiquer” à distance avec une vitesse élevée.

Les facteurs qui améliorent le fonctionnement cérébral ne sont donc pas limités au nombre de neurones ou de synapses.

As in the earliest years of life, a second wave of reorganisation of the brain is taking place during the teenage years. Research on adolescent brain development suggests that secondary and tertiary education are probably vital. The brain is still developing during the period: it is thus presumably adaptable, and needs to be moulded and shaped. ” (p. 8)

Although the changes are less radical than during childhood, the brain continues to change and develop through adulthood. With increasing age, of course, the brain does become less malleable, and we begin to lose neurons at an increasing rate, although the educational effects of this loss are still not well understood. However, there is also evidence that neurogenesis (the birth of new neurons) continues in at least one part of the brain in adulthood. This is in the hippocampus, an area with an important role in learning and memory. The brain’s continuing plasticity suggests that it is well designed for lifelong learning and adaptation to new situations and experiences, and such adaptation can even bring about significant changes in its structure“. (p. 9)

- dyslexie:As our understanding improves and techniques are further developed, it may be possible to identify children at risk from dyslexia well before they begin school, allowing the earliest possible intervention. One promising technique is electroencephalography (EEG), which involves placing a net of electrodes on the scalp to detect and record the minute patterns of electrical activity produced by the brain. Because it is very non-invasive and child- friendly, it has already proved immensely useful in identifying the earliest stirrings of linguistic awareness

- dyscalculie: “Insights into the causes of dyscalculia, which is thought to affect about 4-6 per cent of children in the UK, are beginning to emerge from the neuroscience of mathematical processing. In a neuroimaging study involving normal participants, activity was observed in areas of the brain involved in word association and language activity, the left frontal and angular gyri, when participants calculated answers exactly50. If the type of exact calculation we learn in school recruits areas of the brain associated with language, this suggests that the acquisition of formal mathematics relies on our ability to learn rules and procedures. However, when the same participants attempted to estimate answers, the role of a more ancient and innate ability to approximate was seen to be linked to bilateral activity in the intraparietal sulci. Even at six months, it seems, most of us can approximately differentiate between large numbers of items for ratios of between1:2 and 2:352 and it seems that we share this approximate number sense with other animals53. Such innate mathematical ability may have a critical role in ‘bootstrapping’ our capacity to formally grasp exact differences and procedures54,55. Dyscalculia has been linked to a deficit in these ‘premathematical’ abilities. A study56 of low birth-weight adolescents with numerical difficulties revealed less gray matter in an area of the intraparietal sulcus. Further research is needed to confirm the direction of cause and effect in such studies, but insights from brain imaging research are already inspiring interventions based on new notions of how we develop our mathematical ability, and some of these are showing promise

- programmes d’apprentissage prétendument fondés sur le cerveau, mais qui ne le sont pas du tout : comme Brain Gym ou les programmes pour équilibrer le cerveau droit et celui gauche, ou encore préférences dans les styles d’apprentissage (visuel, acoustique, tactile).

Since the 1990’s, an increasing number of educational programmes have claimed to have a ‘brain basis’. There are few examples of such programmes having been evaluated, and they often appear to have developed without neuroscientific scrutiny. Some of the ideas promoted by these programmes have become part of the educational culture in many schools. In the survey mentioned at the beginning of this commentary, about 30 per cent of teachers attending an INSET day had already heard of the commercial programme known as ‘Brain Gym’63. This programme promotes the idea that neural mechanisms can be influenced by specific physical exercises. The pseudo- scientific terms that are used to explain how this works, let alone the concepts they express, are unrecognisable within the domain of neuroscience. For example, there is a claim that, if children provide pressure on their ‘brain buttons’, they can help re-establish the brain organisation required for reading and writing64. ‘Brain buttons’ are described as indentations between the 1st and 2nd ribs directly under the collar bone to the right and left of the breastbone. Other exercises include the Cross-crawl, promoted on the basis of activating left/right, top/bottom and back/front areas of the brain simultaneously, and varieties of ‘Hook-up’ for calming and stress- relieving effects. ” …

For example, as in Brain Gym, there is a still an emphasis on the desirability of balance between the left and right part of the brain. In Smith65, we are reminded ‘Remember that the synergy generated in creating new pathways between left and right results in all-round improvement’. In fact, except in the rare case of brains which have been lesioned, pathways exist permanently between the left and right hemispheres, most notably via the corpus callosum. At present, there is no scientific evidence to suggest we can voluntarily create new ones. ” …

Some believe that presenting material in a way that suits an individual’s preferred learning style can improve their learning. (Note that it could also be argued that the reverse might also be helpful, as a remedial intervention to improve processing associated with the other learning styles.) However, there is a considerable scarcity of quality research to support the value of identifying learning styles66. A recent psychological investigation of the VAK principle tested recall of information presented in the three different styles. This study showed no benefit from having material presented in one’s preferred learning style, concluding that attempts to focus on learning styles were ‘wasted effort’. Of course, this does not detract from the general value for all learners when teachers present learning materials using a full range of forms and different media. Such an approach can engage the learner and support their learning processes in many different ways, but the existing research does not support labelling children in terms of a particular learning style. ” (pp. 15-16)

Cette considération sur la nécessité d’approfondir les programmes qui fonctionnenet, mais aussi d’aller à la recherche d’explications scientifiques (comment et pourquoi cela fonctionne) semble très raisonnable:

Many ideas about the brain in education may be at odds with present scientific understanding, but perhaps not all of them should be dismissed entirely. For example, short sessions of Brain Gym exercise have been shown to improve response times69, and such strategies, if they are effective, may work because exercise can improve alertness. If they do help learning, the basis for this effect should be researched further, to support improved understanding and practice. Teachers are not always satisfied with knowing that an approach appears to be working. They would also like to know why and how. Educators also care about the validity of scientific claims used to promote an idea70 while a greater understanding of underlying processes also contributes to more effective evaluation. One thing is clear. Education has already invested an immense amount of time and money in ‘brain-based’ ideas that were never based on any recognisable scientific understanding of the brain. Many of these ideas remain untested and others are being revealed as ineffective. In the future, an improved dialogue between neuroscience and education will be critical in supporting the development, application and evaluation of educational programmes based on a sound scientific understanding of the brain.”

Par exemple:

Neurofeedback refers to the monitoring of one’s own brain activity with a view to influencing it. Recent work investigating electroencephalographic (EEG) neurofeedback has found it helpful in improving the performance ability of music students. Conservatoire students received training using neurofeedback and improvements in their musical performance were highly correlated with their ability to progressively influence neural signals associated with attention and relaxation. Similar results have been found for dancers. This is an interesting and unusual example of a technique being borrowed from neuroscience to provide direct improvements for learners. Despite its apparent success, these interventions are not built around any particular cognitive model and the processes involved are not completely understood. However, the helpfulness of EEG feedback in raising levels of attention indicates its potential benefit in a broad variety of educational areas.

Enfin, une partie très utile du livre illustre la manière dont le fonctionnement du cerveau est étudié : notamment les techniques de neuroimagérie. On y met en évidence le fait qu’en dépit du terme “image” les neuroimages ne permettent pas de voir le cerveau en fonction, sinon indirectement, et que cette vision indirecte est de fait une interprétation fondée sur un modèle de corrélation entre processus biologiques et fonctions cognitives. En voici un exemple assez clair, en particulier de la manière dont ces plans s’articulent:

Working memory is one example of how neuroscience is helping to ‘concretise’ psychological concepts. Working memory refers to our capacity to temporarily hold a limited set of information in our attention when we are processing it. This limitation is the reason why we prefer to write down a telephone number a few digits at a time rather than be told the whole number and then start writing. The average upper limit of this type of memory is about seven chunks of information, but there are individual differences in this limit that are linked to differences in educational achievement72. However, understanding pupils’ dependency upon working memory becomes more ‘real’ when brain activities associated with mathematical training are visible. In one recent study, adults learning long multiplication demonstrated a shift, with practice, in the areas of the brain they were using to complete their calculations73. At first, considerable demand upon working memory was demonstrated by activity in the left inferior frontal gyrus, as students explicitly and formally followed the processes they were learning. After practice, this activity reduced and was replaced by greater activity in the left angular gyrus, as processes became more automatic. The images generated by this study provide a helpful and very visual illustration of how the types of mental resource required to solve a problem change with practice. They resonate well with classroom observations of the difficulties faced by many learners when engaging with new problems. In such situations, it can be particularly helpful for pupils to show their working since, apart from many other advantages, external representations can help offload some of these heavy initial demands upon working memory. ” (p. 17)

Pour conclure:

Of course, brain scans cannot give rise directly to lesson plans. There is a need for bridging studies that interpret scientific results in terms of possible interventions, and evaluation of these interventions in suitable learning contexts. One example of such research comes from Innsbruck, where brain imaging and educational interventions have both been used to understand the basis of dyscalculia and methods to remediate it.

There is also a growing need for collaborations between neuroscience, psychology and education that embrace insights and understanding from each perspective, and that involve educators and scientists working together at each stage. Such collaborations are not straightforward, since the philosophies of education and natural science are very different – with various forms of psychology, in a sense, bridging the two. Educational research, with its roots in social science, places strong emphasis upon the importance of social context and the interpretation of meaning. Natural science, on the other hand, is more concerned with controlled experimental testing of hypotheses and the development of generalisable cause-effect mechanisms. This suggests that collaborative research projects may need to extend the cognitive neuroscience model of brain->mind->behaviour.

We are still at an early stage in our understanding of the brain. Most of what we know arises from scientific experimentation, in environments that differ greatly from everyday learning contexts. Another limitation in applying such studies is their focus upon individual cognitive factors rather than the complex abilities required in everyday or academic settings. And, even in respect of these basic cognitive factors, many recent findings have served to emphasise how much more there is to know. The techniques being used to explore the brain are developing rapidly, but many important limitations still exist here too. EEG can provide accurate timing information but provides little impression of where in the brain a particular activity is occurring. In contrast, fMRI provides some accurate idea of the location of brain activity, but is less effective when it comes to identifying when it occurs, especially on a cognitive time scale of milliseconds. Also, techniques such as fMRI are often not considered suitable for routine studies using children, so most fMRI investigations only involve adult participants. The neuroimaging literature tells us more about the adult brain than about that of a developing child. Given these and other limitations, considerable caution needs to be applied when attempting to transfer concepts between neuroscience and education. Such attempts need to be well-informed by expertise from within both fields. ” (pp. 22-23)

2) Blakemore,S-J., Frith,U. (2000). The implications of recent developments in neuroscience for research on teaching and learning. Report compiled for the ESRC Teaching and Learning Research Programme.

“This report was compiled for the ESRC Teaching and Learning Research Programme (www.ex.ac.uk/ESRC-TLRP/). The objective of the report was to identify a research agenda in the field as it cuts across neuroscience, psychology and education.”

Les deux axes clé de la publication sont sans doute l’avancement des neurosciences et leur capacité à fournir des réponses aux questions posées par le monde de l’éducation :

“Neuroscience research is increasingly shedding light on our understanding of the structure and function of the brain. Recent advances in technology have enabled neuroscientists to discover more about how the human brain functions than ever before. Techniques such as functional neuroimaging, which measures activity in the brain as humans perform a certain task, and can be performed using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and positron emission tomography (PET) (see appendix 1), have significantly pushed forward our knowledge of the brain and mind. This report is a selective account of developmental and cognitive neuroscience studies that are informative about learning and might be of relevance to research on teaching and learning. In this report we use the word ‘learning’ to encompass all kinds of learning. When we refer to neuroscience, we include all kinds of study of the brain. That is, we include molecular and cellular neuroscience although we will discuss cognitive neuroscience and neuropsychology studies in more detail. By cognition we mean anything that refers to the ‘mental domain’ which includes emotions. When we refer to cognition or mind, we do not mean to separate them from the brain. We believe that the brain and mind have to be explained together. For posing questions and considering facts we will use a framework that combines environmental, biological, cognitive and behavioural levels of description (Morton and Frith, 1995; see below).”

Les deux domaines identifiés par les auteurs comme ayant le plus grand impacte (potentiel) sur l’éducation sont les neurosciences et la génétique, plus que la psychologie cognitive qui sert de raccord, de pont, entre les domaines et les langages - reconnus comme encore éloignés - des neurosciences et de l’éducation:

At present, some of the most urgent questions in education may be best answered by methods from experimental psychology. However, with more active discussion between neuroscientists and educators, there is potential for totally new questions to emerge that so far could not be answered and hence were never asked. ”

Genetics: “It is likely that genes play a significant role in learning and learning disabilities, and this is the kind of question beginning to be investigated by genetics groups world-wide. Thinking about the educational implications of genetics research will be a hugely important task for the future. The jump from gene to behaviour is much greater than the jump from brain to behaviour. The work to be done in terms of bringing neuroscience into contact with education will facilitate the work that will eventually have to be done to bring insights from genetics to bear on teaching and learning. ” Common vocabulary: “The one-sided approach (can brain research be applied to classroom practice?) can lead to dangers. Therefore taking an interactionist approach (what do educationers need to know that can be informed from brain science?) is more appropriate. To this end, active and empirical collaboration between neuroscientists and educators would be necessary. Such collaboration will benefit from a concerted effort to find common ground. A forum in which neuroscientists and educationers discuss and distinguish their research questions and clarify terminology and methodological differences would be a crucial step. The goal of developing an interdisciplinary ‘science of learning’ cannot be usefully pursued by one or other of the disciplines taking the lead, but depends on each challenging the other with ideas and hypotheses to test and refine. For this task a mediator in needed.”

Le rôle de médiateur serait joué idéalement par la psychologie cognitive, qui s’occupe de “l’esprit” alors que les neurosciences s’occupent du cerveau, et l’éducation des comportements. Une chaine causale lie le cerveau à l’esprit (mind) et celui-ci au comportement, selon le modèle proposé par les deux scientifiques:

cognitive psychology is tailor-made for this role. This is not to exclude developmental psychology, social science, education sociology, anthropology and evolutionary psychology, which all could be represented in an interdisciplinary forum. However, we believe that brain science can impact most readily on research on teaching and learning through cognitive psychology.”

Quel type de connaissances les neurosciences devraient ou pourraient fournir à l’éducation? Frith et Blakemore suggèrent de commencer par les connaissances contre-intuitives, comme celles concernant la plasticité cérébrale (et donc l’apprentissage des adultes ou la nécessité d’éduquer les enfants très petits parce que “plus plastiques”) et les apprentissages implicites (donc la capacité à apprendre “dans le dos” de l’éducation explicite):

it might be more useful to ask where research on the brain can offer information about learning and cognition that is counter-intuitive to the educationer. Two areas that come to mind, and which will be discussed in more detail later in the report are implicit learning and plasticity in the adult brain. Briefly, research on implicit learning has shown that the brain processes information that is neither attended to nor noticed. This tendency of the brain to do things ‘behind one’s back’ is pervasive and might have repercussions on theories of teaching. Many different areas of neuroscience research have demonstrated that the adult brain is ‘plastic’ and capable of a remarkable amount of change and relocation of function, depending on how the brain is used. This research suggests that the brain is well set up for life-long learning and adaptation to the environment, and that rehabilitation is possible and worth investment. On the other hand, it suggests that there is no biological necessity to rush and put the start of teaching earlier and earlier. Rather, late starts might be reconsidered as perfectly in time with findings from brain research.

Au niveau des contenus scientifiques, les deux auteurs prennent en considération 3 thèmes spécifiques : les premières années de l’apprentissage, l’apprentissage tout au long de la vie, les différences entre individus et les problèmes d’apprentissage.

- Early years learning:educators often cite scientific research on brain development when arguing for particular educational practices. For example, there are suggestions that children should begin the study of languages, advanced mathematics, logic, and music as early as possible (Beck, 1996; U.S. Department of Education, 1996). Such arguments claim support from established findings in developmental neurobiology. However, many neuroscientists and cognitive psychologists believe that current questions about educational practice, for instance, questions about the optimal start of formal teaching, cannot yet be answered by neurobiology (Bruer, 1999). ” (p.10)

Le “mythe” de la synaptogénèse précoce et de sa relation avec l’apprentissage qui imposerait une éducation précoce est discuté comme suit :

In summary, while it is true that pre-school children have brains that undergo substantial and rapid changes and are more flexible than adult brains, this increased flexibility remains throughout adolescence at least in some brain areas.Most of what is known about brain development corresponds to the emergence of or changes in visual, movement and memory functions, which are acquired in almost any environment throughout the world at approximately the same age, well before children enter formal education. How synaptogenesis relates to later educational learning or to the acquisition of knowledge and skills such as reading, writing and numeracy is unknown. … Most neuroscientists now believe that critical periods are not rigid and inflexible. Rather, most interpret them as ’sensitive’ periods comprising subtle changes in the brain’s ability to be shaped and changed by experiences that occur over a lifetime. For some functions to develop normally, the animal must receive appropriate sensory input from the environment at some stage during development. However, this input tends to be very general in nature, including patterned visual stimuli, the ability to move and manipulate objects, noises, and speech sounds for humans. Such stimuli are available in almost all environments. Higher cognitive capacities, such as language, have several sensitive periods, many of which continue into adulthood, including second language learning. … Brain research findings and common sense in early childhood care go hand in hand: it is important that parents and teachers rapidly identify and, if possible, treat children’s sensory problems, such as visual and hearing difficulties, so that they can regain normal function. They also suggest that recovery can occur and that learning can still occur later in life. This may be a different kind of learning and may be facilitated by different kinds of teaching. Whether sensitive periods exist for culturally transmitted knowledge systems, such as those responsible for reading and arithmetic, is currently unknown. ” (p 12-13)

En ce qui concerne plus spécifiquement l’acquisition du langage et de la deuxième langue, on sait qu’après 12 mois on perd la capacité à distinguer les sons auxquels on n’a pas été exposé pendant cette période :

Learning one’s own language initially requires categorising the sounds that make up language. New-born babies are able to distinguish between all speech sounds. Sound organisation is determined by the sounds in a baby’s environment in the first 12 months of life - by the end of their first year babies lose the ability to distinguish between sounds to which they are not exposed (Kuhl, 1998). There is evidence that learning the sounds of one’s own language begins in utero - even new-borns can distinguish between sentences spoken in their parents’ native language and sentences in another language, presumably on the basis of prenatal experience with maternal speech (Mehler et al., 1988). Again, it is likely that some dedicated neural mechanisms for processing speech are present in the human brain. … Brain research in this area is based on existing cognitive theories. The consensus at present is that true bilingualism in the sense that neither language has preferential status, does not exist. Instead one language is always chosen as the base (the ‘mother tongue’) and this is processed in universally similar regions mainly of the left hemisphere. On the other hand, it is possible that brain areas used by representation of a second language differ somewhat from person to person. Bilingual studies show that grammar needs to be learned young, whereas the semantics and vocabulary of a language can be delayed and go on throughout life (Neville & Bavelier, 1998). Teaching programmes of the future might be able to build on exemplary systems in efficient learners. Research still needs to establish whether a sensitive period exists for second language learning, which will indicate optimal learning conditions.

En ce qui concerne, de manière plus générale, le rapport entre l’expérience et l’apprentissage, Frith et Blakemore décrivent de manière simple les deux processus impliqués : l’un qui dépend fortement de l’âge et de la disponibilité des stimuli qui permettent à certaines fonctions de se développer normalement ; l’autre, moins dépendant de l’âge, est sollicité par la présence de certains stimuli :

A fundamental characteristic of the brain is that it is organised through a process of interaction between the organism and its environment. In other words, experience drives the developmental process. Neurobiological research has shown that experience affects brain development in at least two ways. Firstly, ‘experience-expectant’ development involves age-specific neural readiness for information normally available in the (species- typical) environment, and often involves overproduction and selective elimination of synapses. Secondly, ‘experience-dependent’ development refers to those aspects of experience that are unique to the individual and may be acquired at a wide range of ages; learning and memory appear to be experience-dependent processes; experience- dependent processes appear to involve active synapse formation and modification in response to experience. Thus learning and memory can be viewed as the most education- relevant aspect of a general adaptive process that updates the organisation of the brain on the basis of the organism’s experience.(p. 16)

Naturellement les auteurs citent les expériences menées sur les rats qui montrent que des environnements riches (en réalité normaux), comparés à des environnements pauvres en stimuli, permettent le développent d’une meilleure capacité d’apprentissage ; mais aussi que la privation de stimuli n’a pas nécessairement des effets définitifs:

In these experiments, the ‘enriched’ environment in the laboratory was actually more like the normal environment of a rat in the wild. So, rather than showing that extra stimulation leads to an increase in synaptic connections, it might be more accurate to say that a more ‘normal’ environment leads to more synaptic connections than a deprived environment. In terms of human babies, the research does not imply that parents should provide special ‘enriching’ experiences to children beyond those that they experience in everyday life. It is unlikely that children brought up in any ‘normal’ species-specific environment could be deprived of sensory input.” (p. 17)

Recent studies have demonstrated that Romanian babies reared in severely deprived conditions, with poor nutrition, ill-health, little sensory or social stimulation, are more likely to have delayed development of skills such as walking and talking, and impaired social, emotional and cognitive development (O’Connor et al., 1999). However, the recovery of these functions and the resilience of the deprived children in these studies was striking. So although it is clearly damaging to deprive a baby and length of deprivation relates to extent of adverse effects, this research does suggest that even very deprived babies can recover to a large extent if given remedial stimulation and care.” (p. 18)

Une importante conclusion méthodologique qui concerne l’apport futur des neurosciences à l’éducation : les neurosciences sont susceptibles dans le futur de mettre en évidence les périodes de développement de la myélinisation, de la connectivité, et donc de donner des bases neurales aux périodes sensibles ; ces recherches pourront un jour permettre de donner des indications quant aux réponses à apporter à la question “Apprendre : quand et quoi ?”. Mais pour que cela arrive, il faut que la recherche en neurosciences et celle en éducation procèdent ensemble:

brain imaging could in theory give a biological underpinning to concepts of critical/sensitive periods. In particular, it may be possible that research using diffusion tensor imaging will tell us about the development of myelination, connectivity, etc. and that this may relate to optimal windows for learning performance. However, if this type of brain research is to have an impact on education, it will need to be designed and carried out in active collaboration with educational researchers.” (p. 19)

- Life long learning: “The adult brain remains flexible and capable of a remarkable amount of change and relocation of function, depending on how it is used. It is important to point out that this type of plasticity is a baseline state – it is occurring all the time in the brain, whenever a new memory is laid down or a new face is seen.” (p. 24)

L’apprentissage n’est pas une activité unique et identique, elle diffère selon les types de contenus : “It is unlikely that there is one single type of learning for everything. In terms of brain structures involved, learning maths differs from learning to read, which differs from learning to play the piano.(p. 25))

En particulier, il existe des apprentissages implicites et de apprentissages explicites : on est capables d’apprendre, sans s’en rendre compte, des règles complèxes en étant exposés à des séquences qui adèrent à ces règles. Many years of research on implicit learning have shown that people are able to learn information in the absence of awareness. People can learn complex rules by being exposed to sequences that adhere to the rules, without having any explicit notion of the rules or having learned them (Berns et al., 1997)…

Learning a skill, that is procedural learning, differs from the acquisition of declarative knowledge (Bechara et al, 1995). …For purposes of teaching it might be important to know that learning facts, such as mathematical equations and historical dates, relies on different brain regions than learning to do sport or play a musical instrument. A possible research question is whether the two kinds of learning can occur in parallel rather than each having to be taught separately. For instance, can teaching usefully combine counting and skipping?

Teaching often involves making procedural knowledge declarative. How do teachers know when to make rules explicit? Does a reciprocal dialectic between implicit learning and explicit teaching aid learning? Can explicit teaching replace missing implicit learning? Is a degree of prior implicit learning always helpful?” (p. 26-27)” “Is it necessary to learn implicitly first, then explicitly? Can explicit learning happen when intuitive grasp is lacking? What does it mean to teach so that implicit learning is facilitated? ” (p. 41)

De plus, étant donné que l’apprentissage “change” notre cerveau: “What are the costs to the brain of acquiring a new skill or improving an old skill? Does enhancement of certain brain regions compromise other regions? Does getting better at one skill mean taking away space from another skill? What brain systems are involved in transfer of learning and can they be boosted? ” (p. 41)

- Individual differences and learning difficulties:”Little is known about individual differences in the brain. Brain research tends to look for similarities, not differences, between brains. Consequently, brain research on individual differences has hardly been done. In the future, such knowledge may help us to access each child’s personality, ability and learning needs. This may then lead to a more personalised, adequate and efficient way of teaching and learning.” (p. 43)

Les capacités mathématiques ont été étudiées par Stanislas Dehaene qui a proposé un modèle potentiellement applicable à l’enseignement des mathématiques et au traitement des pathologies connues sous le nom de discalculie: “In the adult brain, lesion and brain-imaging studies indicate that the left and right intraparietal area, which is involved in visuo-spatial processing, is associated with knowledge of numbers and their relations (‘number sense’). Firstly, parietal lesions can lead to dyscalculia. Secondly, the parietal lobe is activated by arithmetic (Deheane et al., 1999). This fits with the notion that calculation contains a spatial element. It is believed that this quantity representation system is present, at least in a rudimentary form, very early on in development and even in evolution because behavioural studies have revealed number perception, discrimination, and elementary calculation abilities in infants (Spelke, 1994) and animals (see Dehaene et al., 1998)….It has been proposed that our ability to make sense of number concepts rests on this non- verbal representational system located in the parietal lobe (Dehaene et al., 1999). Deheane suggests that during development and education the quantity system becomes progressively linked to other representations of numbers, either visually in the form of strings of Arabic digits (e.g. 85), or verbally in the form of strings of words (e.g. eighty- five).” (p. 45-46)

En général les neurosciences semblent apporter une aide efficace dans les cas de désordre de l’apprentissage et donnent des indications pertinentes pour les situations “normales”, où tout se passe bien : “There are a number of caveats, which temper this optimistic evaluation. It seems most likely that the main impact of neuroscience on education will be felt in the field of learning disorders. Research to date has implications for what to do when the brain goes wrong. The implications are less clear for what to do when brains function normally or how to improve normal functioning. Even psychology studies designed to answer questions of teaching and learning do not always have applications, because lab-based experiments rarely take into account the culture of the classroom or individual differences.(p. 50)

Le texte présente en plus une série de questions ouvertes, possibles scénarios de recherche pour le  futur :

Does knowing about the brain aid learning? Should children and adults (pupils, teachers and parents) be taught about their brains and learning? These are questions amenable to empirical research. Are there differences between teachers who are aware of neuroscience/psychology and teachers who are not? For example, are there differences in their methods or success? If teachers know about how the brain learns do they behave differently towards children? Would they change their class size, teaching or testing methods?

En conclusion les auteurs indiquent leur sentiment quant au futur d’une science intégrée de l’apprentissage. Ils estiment à 5-10 ans le temps nécessaire pour créer une convergence, une coopération efficace, entre l’éducation, les neurosciences et la psychologie cognitive. Ceci pourra être rendu possible grâce à l’organisation de forums, lieux de réflexion communs, et grâce à la médiation des sciences cognitives. En 2010, des progrès on en effet été fait dans cette direction, avec la naissance d’associations, de journaux, de formations. Cependant on ne peut pas dès maintenant faire l’économie de certaines actions “d’impulsion” (comme celles décrites en fin de rapport), ainsi que de la nécessaire communication  entre le monde de l’éducation et le monde de la science du cerveau et de l’esprit :

Learning experiments conducted by cognitive psychologists have taught us a lot about how we process information, about different ways of encoding information, about how to make encoding more efficient, and about the application of skills that enhance learning, such as mnemonics and imitation. Results from these experiments have implications for education as well as for neuroscience research. We strongly believe that to continue discovering how the brain learns and how to facilitate this learning, an interdisciplinary ‘learning science’ is needed. The evolution of such an approach, with convergence from brain scientists, psychologists, and educationers, would probably need five to ten years. A continuous forum for neuroscientists and educationers, with cognitive psychologists as mediators, could be a way forward. This would allow a common vocabulary to emerge and research questions to be discussed and elaborated. Within such a forum, a number of workshop and research projects could be organised, as well as a web-page discussion group. A charismatic individual needs to be found to lead such an enterprise, and the members should consist of scientists and practitioners with fresh ideas. An important prerequisite to generate research in teaching and learning is the dissemination of findings from neuroscience, possibly via cognitive psychology. Currently there is little information about neuroscience research that is accessible to educationers and teachers. Literature (books, journals, magazines), videos, CD ROMS, cassettes that explain basic findings from brain science and cognitive psychology would be a useful tool. However, the interaction should not comprise a one-way flow of information in which educationers learn about neuroscience. The goal of developing an interdisciplinary ‘science of learning’ cannot be usefully pursued by one or other of the disciplines taking the lead, but depends on each challenging the other with ideas and hypotheses to test.

La carte des sciences cognitives en France, par le RISC

Le Relais d’information  sur les sciences de la cognition met à disposition une carte des sciences cognitives en France pour trouver des laboratoires et cartographier les thèmes de recherche sur le territoire français.

On y trouve, à propos de l’apprentissage:

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Listening, learning, and the brain

The Listening, Learning, and the Brain project, an ongoing project in the Auditory Neuroscience Lab, is a combined effort of experts in speech perception, learning disabilities and neurophysiology. Our goal is to understand normal and impaired auditory function in order to help children read and communicate better. Specifically, we are looking at how the brain responds to speech and how this relates to reading and learning.

Un projet très intéressant (Neural encoding of music) de ce laboratoire concerne le rôle de la musique (écoutée ou pratiquée) sur la représentation cérébrale du langage (le projet est financé par le Cognitive neuroscience program de NSF):

Musical experience has a pervasive effect on the nervous system. Our recent articles show that lifelong musical experience enhances neural encoding of speech as well as music, and heightens audiovisual interaction. Our work suggests that musicians have a specialized neural system for processing sight and sound in the brainstem, the neural gateway to the brain. This evolutionarily ancient part of the brain was previously thought to be relatively unmalleable; however, our studies indicate that music, a high-order cognitive process, affects automatic processing that occurs early in the processing stream, and fundamentally shapes subcortical sensory circuitry.

Voici quelques articles de vulgarisation qui expliquent les buts et les résultats du projet :

The Dana Foundation, October 30, 2009
Music Training Linked to Better Understanding of Speech

So might musical training help enhance executive function? Nina Kraus, the head of Northwestern University’s Audio Neuroscience Lab, decided to test just that. “We reasoned that the nervous system works in economical and pervasive ways when it comes to speech and music,” Kraus says. “A basic musical skill is picking out a relevant signal from a number of other sounds—so we hypothesized that musicians may be better at hearing speech in background noise because of their training.” Kraus and colleagues Alexandra Parbery-Clark, Carrie Lam and Erika Skoe evaluated participants as they listened to and then repeated back sentences presented in varying amounts of background noise. Those who had musical training, defined as ten or more years of musical study, were much better able to repeat the sentences than those without it. Kraus says the finding supports the argument that musical training may harness areas of the brain that improve executive functioning.The study, published in the Sept. 3 issue of Ear and Hearing, could influence future therapies for both older people who can have difficulty differentiating speech in noise and children with disabilities like autism or attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD).

National Science Foundation, Discoveries, April 10, 2009
Fine-Tuned Brains

National Science Foundation, November 13, 2009

Report Says Musicians Hear Better Than Non-Musicians

“The Journal of Neuroscience reports this week that musicians are better than non-musicians at recognizing speech in noisy environments. The finding from a study conducted by neurobiologists at Northwestern University in Chicago is the first biological evidence that musicians’ have a perceptual advantage for “speech-in-noise.” When tested against non-musicians, musicians demonstrated faster neural timing, enhanced representation of speech harmonics, and less degraded response morphology in noise. That is to say, they were more effective communicating in noisy environments. “Converting key elements that comprise speech sounds–consonants, syllables, timing and harmonics–was maintained with greater fidelity in musicians despite the disruptive influence of background noise,” said lead researcher Nina Kraus, Hugh Knowles Professor at and director of Northwestern’s Auditory Neuroscience Laboratory. This likely occurs because cognitive processes that involve auditory attention and memory strengthen musicians’ nervous systems enabling them to sense and discern relevant sounds. Understanding the biological basis for this advantage is the goal of the research, which may also prove beneficial for children and adults, who have difficulty hearing in noise. Speech perception in noise is a complex task people are faced with every day. Cognitive demands of a musical performance are equally complex in that they require musicians to parse concurrently presented instruments or voices. The researchers hypothesized that a musician’s lifelong experience with “musical stream segregation,” that is separating competing voices and musical instruments during a performance, would also give musicians an advantage in “speech-in-noise” environments.

Scientific American, September 24, 2007
Did Sesame Street Have It Right?

Research has been piling up over the past decade that shows training can boost everything from pitch perception to visual and motor skills. And now a new study says it may also improve language-processing abilities—a finding that lends support to the effectiveness of teaching letters and words to kids through songs, as TV programs like Sesame Street have done for years. Researchers report in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA that music triggers changes in the brain stem—as well as in the cortex or outer brain layers as previously reported. Senior study author Nina Kraus, a professor of neurobiology and physiology at Northwestern University, says this means music training may not only improve a person’s ability to decipher different tones but also enhances reading and speech functions, because the brain stem is a pathway for both music and language. If that is the case, music instruction may be used as a tool to help children with speech difficulties and learning deficits.

Science, March 13, 2009
Tuning the Brain

La première séance du séminaire EDU.TE.CO. 2010: bref compte-rendu

Le 17 février Manuela Piazza a ouvert le séminaire EDU.TE.CO. avec une présentation portant sur la cognition numérique (la présentation est disponible en pdf ici).

La cognition numérique possède certaines particularités qui contribuent à la définir. Une partie de ces capacités est spécifiquement humaine alors que d’autres aspects “basilaires” auraient des racines profondes dans l’évolution.

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Compas au DEC : le séminaire EDU.TE.CO. 2010

Cette année le Groupe Compas a choisi de donner un thème spécifique à son séminaire au DEC : celui de l’éducation fondée sur la preuve et sur les savoirs.

Deux grandes courants d’études et de politiques éducatives se croisent dans cette acception large et générale. D’un côté : les études en neurosciences et en sciences cognitives qui, de manière générale, portent sur les mécanismes de l’apprentissage ou sur tout mécanisme du fonctionnement cérébral ou mental susceptible de fournir des bases scientifiques à des pratiques éducatives. Un exemple parmi d’autres : ce qu’on sait de la plasticité cérébrale. De l’autre côté : les études et les politiques qui, dans le champ de l’éducation, affirment la nécessité de fournir des preuves sous forme de mesure objective de l’efficacité d’une méthode d’éducation particulière. Les politiques américaines liées à “No child left behind” et “What works in education” en constituent des cas exemplaires, non exempts, cependant, de défauts. Il est établi que les deux domaines devraient s’associer de manière plus étroite, que le problème de la mesure concerne des faits assez différents (performances des élèves, efficacité d’une méthode ou d’un outil), et que les jugements négatifs (souvent justifiés) suscités par les opérations “No child left behind” “What works in education” risquent de se traduire en soupçons à l’égard de l’utilisation du savoir scientifique dans la conception de programmes éducatifs, tout à fait injustifiés.

Notre séminaire a pour but de solliciter une réflexion, à l’intérieur du Groupe Compas mais aussi à l’extérieur, sur ces deux courants d’études et de politiques.

En même temps, le Groupe Compas est sensible à la tâche qui consiste à rendre les découvertes et les connaissances apportées par les sciences cognitives (y compris les neurosciences) disponibles et compréhensibles pour les les responsables politiques et les enseignants. Nous sommes conscients du risque de voir circuler des neuromythes ou des transpositions trop directes entre les savoirs scientifiques et les pratiques éducatives. Les sciences du cerveau sont encore jeunes et il n’est pas aisé d’en tirer des indications “prêtes à l’usage” pour l’éducation. Le risque d’importer des concepts qui sont seulement partiellement corrects, est important (cela peut arriver en particulier quand les sciences de la cognition nous montrent l’existence de correlations entre les fonctions ou même entre les aires cérébrales et que ces connexions sont assimilées par les non-cognitivistes à des connexions causales).

La première séance du séminaire participe de cet effort du Groupe Compas et du séminaire. Elle sera dédiée à la cognition mathématique.

17 février, 11h30

Salle Lapie - DEC (29, rue d’Ulm 75005 Paris)

Manuela Piazza

Abstract: Humans come to life equipped with sophisticated mechanisms based on parietal cortex circuitry for representing different aspects of the self and of the world that are crucial for planning actions. These aspects mainly relate to space and quantity and include position, spatial configuration, size, time, and approximate number. While these mechanisms are functional at very early age, during development they undergo important refinements both as a function of pure brain maturation and of exposure to specific cultural practices. The presentation will draw upon the latest functional imaging and research data to demonstrate why and how understanding these mechanisms can have strong practical implications for maths teaching and remedial programs.

Lectures conseillées

Piazza Izard_How Humans Count_Neuroscientist09.pdf

Piazza Dehaene_Chap Gazzaniga.pdf

Autres publications de Manuela Piazza

Une page du site Compas est dédiée au séminaire et à ses thèmes, avec des articles, des cartographies du panorama scientifique et des commentaires.