
The symposium was arranged with the purpose of cutting across some of the lines dividing various disciplines all having a common interest in different aspects of the functioning of the brain. The essays, given originally as lectures at one of the Jubilee celebrations of the University of Saskatchewan, were deliberately designed to be of interest to laymen concerned with the problem of education as well as to academics dealing daily with products of the brain's activity in teaching and learning. One of the main themes of the book is that the human brain has far greater potentialities than our present methods of education are exploiting; another is that, although our universities can be said to owe their very existence to the multiplex activities of the human mind, the subject of how the brain functions and the application of even our rather meagre knowledge of this field to the sphere of teaching and learning remains greatly neglected in university programmes. The subject of brain function, studied daily by the neurologist and neuro-surgeon, should gain the interest of non-medical fields concerned with utilizing the mechanism of the mind.
This work investigates the disconnect between neurobiological research on brain function and the practical application of this knowledge within contemporary educational systems. Edited by William Feindel, the text compiles lectures from a University of Saskatchewan Jubilee symposium to bridge the gap between neurological science and pedagogical practice. The contributors argue that human cognitive potential is significantly underutilized due to a lack of integration between brain science and academic curriculum design. By presenting these findings to both laypeople and academics, the book advocates for a more informed approach to teaching that accounts for the physical mechanisms of memory and language.
What You Will Find
Experts recognize this collection as a significant early effort to foster interdisciplinary dialogue between the medical community and educational theorists. Readers frequently note that while the prose is accessible to laymen, it maintains a rigorous focus on the biological constraints and possibilities of the human mind.
Page Count:
80
Publication Date:
1960-01-01
Publisher:
University of Toronto Press
ISBN-10:
0196233569
ISBN-13:
9780196233567
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