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    THE TEEN BRAIN AND MODERN TECHNOLOGY WITH DR MARK WILLIAMS

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    St Mark's Anglican Community School
    hillarys, australia
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    Event description

    VENUE INFORMATION: Please note that the venue may be changed to another area of the school depending on numbers. 

    WHAT:

    Learning outcomes, resilience, curiosity, tolerance, and emotional intelligence are all declining, whilst stress, anxiety, depression and suicide are rising. Money and technology alone are not the answer to innovative practices in our schools. We need a significant shift in our understanding. Teachers will learn how our brains learn and adapt and why modern technology is affecting students’ learning and wellbeing. We will discuss the current assumptions about technology in schools and how independent research has shown that many of these ideas are actually wrong.

    About Dr Mark Williams:

    Mark’s new book, “The Connected Species: How Understanding the Evolution of Our Brain Can Change the World,” is a #1 Best Seller.

    With an extensive academic background in brain research and teaching, Mark has worked with thousands of students, teachers, health professionals, and company directors keen to understand how their brain works and how to perform optimally and maintain a healthy brain. He runs programs on the neuroscience of learning, the neuroscience of emotions, how our brains create our reality, and the impact of modern technologies on our brains.

    Dr Williams is a professor of cognitive neuroscience with over 25 years of experience conducting behavioural and brain imaging research focusing on our social skills. He has received numerous awards for both his teaching and research. He has taught the fundamentals of neuroscience to a wide range of students, as well as published more than 70 scientific articles and worked at MIT in the USA and multiple universities in Australia.

    He draws on his extensive scientific background to work with schools, companies and the public to develop evidence-based practices using neuroscience to enhance our education, work and personal lives. His work has been highlighted in the media both locally [e.g., Mirror Mirror (Channel Ten), Our Brain, Magic and the Brain, Music and the Brain, Making Australia Happy (ABC), Sunrise (Channel 7), Screen Time is Affecting Learning (SkyNews)] and internationally [e.g., The Guardian (UK), New York Times (USA), Economist, New Scientist, Leading Edge, (BBC: UK), Science in Action (BBC; International)].

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