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As I am living the student anxiety train with one of my own children, it has got me thinking about all of our students that regularly deal with anxiety. How do we help them to not only manage day-to-day but move forward?
Our very fast-paced and "connected" world today can be both a blessing and a curse for our students. While it's great to stay connected with, chat and play games online with both friends and family, our online lives can become a detriment to our real lives if we aren't careful. The declines in real social skills, stressful personal lives, and ever-increasing school standards and pressures combine to make for a rough go for many of our students.
While it's great to say be grateful, have a growth mindset, etc., that's not as easy to do as it is to say. We have to first understand how the brain really works.
Our brains are wired to make habits, to make as many things automatic so they can focus on new information coming in. If your student's cortex is busy trying to remember how to balance and sit up straight, then it can't focus on what the teacher is saying. It can only do ONE task at a time. So the brain makes pathways for repeated tasks, thought patterns, and actions - good ones and not-so-good ones.
In fact, the brain isn't picky. It doesn't place judgment on items we do all the time. That's why addictions can happen so easily. As we do something on a more regular basis [or even just continually think about it], the brain wraps myelin [think insulation] around those particular nerve cell axons [think wires that send info] each time we engage in that behavior. The more we engage, the thicker the myelin wrapping gets. As the myelin gets thinker, the brain defaults to those patterns as automatic habits [think - the path of least resistance]. At this time, I have not found any research to show those patterns ever completely go away. Hence why a recovering alcoholic is essentially always on alert. So, it's very easy to reactivate that old habit pattern lurking in the depts of the brain. The good news is...we can weaken the undesirable patterns and intentionally create newer, stronger patterns to override the old patterns. The more we choose those new actions and thoughts, the stronger they become.
Ok, enough brain science. Thank you for indulging my geeky side with the brain research.
Obviously, today's episode is all about anxiety and helping your students cope. While strategies abound, I have found that giving students both coping skills, practice when they are calm in using them, and giving students as much control for their self-care as we can, helps to begin to move students in the right direction.
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Praying this is your best year yet!
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Teach joyfully,
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You can listen to this episode HERE.
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