Wednesday, February 8, 2023

Mapping the brain Test /lesson plans

Lobes of the Brain

The average human brain weighs about 1,400 grams (3 lb). The brain looks a little like a large pinkish-gray walnut. The brain can be divided down the middle lengthwise into two halves called the cerebral hemispheres. Each cerebral hemisphere is divided into four lobes by sulci and gyri. The sulci (or fissures) are the grooves and the gyri are the "bumps" that can be seen on the surface of the brain. The folding created by the sulci and gyri increases the amount of cerebral cortex that can fit in the skull. The total surface area of the cerebral cortex is about 324 square inches or about the size of a full page of a newspaper. Each person has a unique pattern of gyri and sulci.


The brain is divided into 3 main areas:


the brain stem, responsible for basic body functions such as heartbeat regulation;

the cerebellum, responsible for things such as balance and muscular coordination and

the cerebrum, made of two distinct hemispheres and responsible for higher brain functions including thinking and emotions.


The front parts of the brain (thumb side, if your brain is positioned as though its owner were looking at you) are called the frontal lobes. These lobes are responsible for reasoning and higher brain functions. The upper middle lobes (around the middle fingers) are the parietal lobes, responsible for touch. The lower middle lobes and the backs of the hands (nearest the ears in a person) are the temporal lobes, responsible for hearing. Finally, the back lobes (pinkie fingers) are the occipital lobes, responsible for vision.



 Create a model of the brain by using clay, playdough, styrofoam, recyclables, food, etc. Create a whole brain or use a brain atlas and create cross-sections of the brain at different levels. Use different colors to indicate different structures.








 Materials:

Clay or Playdough or Styrofoam or Recyclables (bottle caps, cups, buttons, etc) OR Food (fruit, jelly beans)
A picture or diagram of the brain

Another nice model can be found in the lesson plan called Potato Head. This lesson was originally from the Brain Power program at the Pacific Science Center and Group Health. In this lesson, you mix potato flakes, sand, warm water, and food coloring in a ziploc bag. The resulting mixture is about the size, weight, and color of an adult human brain. This activity also has a remarkable "WOW!" effect on students. If you have lots of time and money, you can have students in groups make their own potato head brains. Otherwise, makeup 1-4 yourself to pass around the room. They can be rewarmed in the microwave for later classes, to save on material costs. They can be added to a worm bin or garden for disposal.

Brain "Recipes"
Here are two recipes for the construction of a model brain:

Recipe 1 (from the Pacific Science Center and the Group Health Cooperative in Seattle, WA)
Materials:
1.5 cups (360 ml) instant potato flakes
2.5 cup (600 ml) hot water
2 cups (480 ml) clean sand
1 gallon ziplock bag
Combine all of the ingredients in the ziplock bag and mix thoroughly. It should weigh about 3 lbs. (1.35 kg.) and have the consistency of a real brain.


Recipe 2 (from BrainLink)
Materials:
2 cups water
2 cups flour
4 teaspoons cream of tartar
One quarter cup vegetable oil
1 cup salt
Red food coloring
Mix the water, salt, flour, and cream of tartar in a large bowl or blender until the lumps disappear. Then mix in the vegetable oil. Put the entire mixture into a saucepan and "cook" it over low heat until it gets lumpy. Pour the mixture out and let it cool. Then knead and shape it into the form of a brain. Don't forget to add wrinkles (gyri) to your brain. Squirt in red food coloring for blood vessels.







*A)What percentage of your brain do you use?‐Richard E.Cytowic 
http://ed.ted.com/lessons/what‐percentage‐of‐your‐brain‐do‐you‐use‐richard‐e‐cytowic 
*B)What happens when you remove the hippocampus? 
http://ed.ted.com/lessons/what‐happens‐when‐you‐remove‐the‐hippocampus‐sam‐kean
*C)How sugar affects the brain 
http://ed.ted.com/lessons/how‐sugar‐affects‐the‐brain‐nicole‐avena 
*D)How stress affects your brain 
http://ed.ted.com/lessons/how‐stress‐affects‐your‐brain‐madhumita‐murgia



Lobe Poems 
Individuals or teams create short poems to describe a particular lobe of the brain. Those who didn’t write the poem guess which lobe the poem is describing. 
Example poem: 
This part of the brain helps you move,  
Without it, you couldn’t bust a groove 
Coordinating movement for a cool guy swagger, 
Without it, you’d look drunk and stagger. 
Can you guess what part of the brain this is? Answer: cerebellum.



Brains are similar in many ways between species. These similarities allow us to learn more about our own brains and behavior by studying other animals. At the same time, there are also many differences between species. The relative size of regions with a species’ brain tells us what functions are particularly important to that species: for example, humans have larger frontal regions relative to the rest of their brains. Frontal regions are responsible for mental processes such as reasoning, decision-making, and planning—things that humans are very good at doing!
 Key points: 
• The overall size of a brain is not the most important factor in determining intelligence (e.g. humans have nowhere near the biggest brain in terms of overall size).
• The brain-to-body mass ratio is a rough measure of the intelligence of an animal (but not without flaws) as well as the amount of “wrinkles” on a brain (surface area to volume ratio). 
• Frontal areas relative to the rest of the brain are the biggest in humans. 
• Scientists often study other animals’ brains and behavior to learn more about human brains and behavior.




Start by watching the video Brain Play, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oPFKwu_quxI where students will meet the parts of the brain and learn about the function of each part. Since this app serves as a connector for all of the Neuro Play Adventures, you may use it to also introduce each of the games listed below.

 

Discuss what students remember and have learned about the parts of the brain. Ask students which parts they use at recess. Which do they use when doing a writing activity? There are many ways the students’ answers can be correct here, with so many ways the brain is useful!

 

Ask ‘Why do you say that’ when a student gives a response, and find out more about how the student is thinking about the brain part.

 

Here are more questions to expand the conversation:

 Which parts do you use without knowing?
 Which parts do you use at recess?
 Ask they have ideas about the parts working together.
 

Here are some examples.

 Making up a dance: Planning and coming up with ideas for a dance uses the cerebral cortex, while performing it involves the cerebellum
Telling a story: The amygdala and hippocampus can work together because your feelings about something will influence how you store the memory.
Solving a math problem: You might use your hippocampus to remember math facts while also using your cerebral cortex to think of how to come up with a way to solve a math problem.
 

When you think students are ready with some of their own ideas about the functions and roles of the brain parts, have them break into groups and distribute the project materials.

 

Tell the students

We are going to put our brains to work to draw a cartoon or illustration of someone (it can be you) using at least one part of their brain. Have each student draw a picture such as doing a dance or feeling an emotion, and then label which part of the brain the character is using.

 









1.  The lobe of the brain important for vision is called:
	a.  the temporal lobe		c.  the parietal lobe
	b.  the occipital lobe		d.  the frontal lobe

2.  The lobe of the brain important for the sense of touch is called:
	a.  the temporal lobe		c.  the parietal lobe
	b.  the occipital lobe		d.  the frontal lobe

3.  The lobe of the brain important for hearing is called:
	a.  the temporal lobe		c.  the parietal lobe
	b.  the occipital lobe		d.  the frontal lobe

4.  The lobe of the brain important for reasoning is called:
	a.  the temporal lobe		c.  the parietal lobe
	b.  the occipital lobe		d.  the frontal lobe

5.  The lobe on the diagram labeled 1 is:
	a.  the temporal lobe		c.  the parietal lobe
	b.  the occipital lobe		d.  the frontal lobe

6.  The lobe on the diagram labeled 2 is:
	a.  the temporal lobe		c.  the parietal lobe
	b.  the occipital lobe		d.  the frontal lobe

7.  The lobe on the diagram labeled 3 is:
	a.  the temporal lobe		c.  the parietal lobe
	b.  the occipital lobe		d.  the frontal lobe

8.  The lobe on the diagram labeled 4 is:
	a.  the temporal lobe		c.  the parietal lobe
	b.  the occipital lobe		d.  the frontal lobe

9.  An adult brain weighs approximately:
	a.  1 lb.       b.  3 lb.     c.  5 lb.    d.  7 lb.

10.  A person's brain is about the size of:
	a.  their heart	  b. their stomach   c. 1 fist	 d. 2 fists

Answers:  1.b  2.c  3.a  4.d  5.b  6.c  7.a  8.d  9.b  10. d



Monday, February 6, 2023

Soliloquy

 A soliloquy is a speech that a character in a play speaks aloud, but it can only be heard by that character and the audience. It is used as a way of expressing the inner thoughts and feelings of a character to an audience or revealing important plot details that we couldn't otherwise know about.



What is the most famous soliloquy?

To be or not to be

In fact, Hamlet's “To be or not to be” speech is the best-known soliloquy in the world.

William Shakespeare uses the literary technique of the soliloquy to allow the audience to see deeper into his characters' thoughts in his play, Hamlet. This technique helps to reveal Hamlet's true character, expressing emotions that the audience cannot see through his interactions with other characters.

What is the full meaning of soliloquy?

act of talking to oneself

Soliloquy (from the Latin solus “alone” and loqui “to speak”) at its most basic level refers to the act of talking to oneself, and more specifically denotes the solo utterance of an actor in a drama.


What's the difference between a soliloquy and a monologue?

Remember, a soliloquy involves a character speaking his thoughts to himself, he is not speaking directly to anyone, including the audience. The plural form is soliloquies. A monologue is a speech spoken by one character, usually in a play.

Friday, February 3, 2023

Sea-Fever BY JOHN MASEFIELD

 Sea-Fever

BY JOHN MASEFIELD

I must go down to the seas again, to the lonely sea and the sky,

And all I ask is a tall ship and a star to steer her by;

And the wheel’s kick and the wind’s song and the white sail’s shaking,

And a grey mist on the sea’s face, and a grey dawn breaking.

 

I must go down to the seas again, for the call of the running tide

Is a wild call and a clear call that may not be denied;

And all I ask is a windy day with the white clouds flying,

And the flung spray and the blown spume, and the seagulls crying.

 

I must go down to the seas again, to the vagrant gypsy life,

To the gull’s way and the whale’s way where the wind’s like a whetted knife;

And all I ask is a merry yarn from a laughing fellow rover,

And quiet sleep and a sweet dream when the long trick’s over.




What is the meaning of the poem Sea Fever?

In English poet John Masefield's "Sea Fever," a speaker passionately insists that he must return to a sailor's life in order to be happy. The freedom of the open sea and a life of travel and adventure call to him, and he wants nothing more than to live out his days on a ship, roaming the ocean.


What type of poem is Sea Fever?

"Sea Fever" is a lyric poem written in simple language. The poem has three stanzas similar in structure. For example, each stanza is a quatrain consisting of two couplets.


What is the tone of the poem Sea Fever?

The tone of the poem seems to be nostalgic or sentimental but also desperate. The speaker is remembering all of the times they had out on the sea, reminiscing in the past. The repetition of the words "I must go down to the seas again" reinforces the desperateness in the narrator's tone.


What is the central theme of Sea Fever?

Adventures, memories, and journeys are the major themes of this poem. The speaker hears a continuous call from the sea, and he says that it is unavoidable. He wishes to break the current situation and return to the adventurous life to enjoy his youth at sea.

















Thursday, February 2, 2023

Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2023

 new snap jeader eng

February 1, 2023

Since March 2020, Congress temporarily increased SNAP benefits by providing Emergency Allotments to help low-income individuals and families across the US deal with the financial hardships of the COVID-19 pandemic. The Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2023 law recently passed by Congress ends emergency allotments after February 2023 SNAP EA benefits are issued. This means that by
March 2023, all SNAP households’ benefits will return to standard SNAP benefit amounts, without the added supplement.

Emergency Allotment Start Date

Emergency Allotment End Date

March 2020

February 2023

IMPORTANT: If you are impacted by your SNAP benefits returning to the standard federal allotment amount and need emergency food assistance, we encourage you to contact the Maryland Food Bank at https://mdfoodbank.org/find-food/ or Capital Area Food Bank at https://www.capitalareafoodbank.org/find-food-assistance/https://www.capitalareafoodbank.org/find-food-assistance/


new snap header in spanish

1 de Febrero, 2023

Desde marzo de 2020, el Congreso aumentó temporalmente los beneficios del SNAP mediante Asignaciones de Emergencia para ayudar a las personas y familias de bajos ingresos de EE. UU. a hacer frente a las dificultades económicas por la pandemia de COVID-19. La Ley de Asignaciones Consolidadas de 2023 aprobada recientemente por el Congreso pone fin a las Asignaciones de
Emergencia después de que se emitan los beneficios de las EA del SNAP en febrero de 2023. Esto significa que, para marzo de 2023, todos los beneficios de las unidades familiares beneficiarias del SNAP volverán a recibir los montos estándar de los beneficios, sin el complemento adicional.

Fecha de inicio de la Asignación
de Emergencia

Fecha de finalización de la
Asignación de Emergencia

Marzo de 2020

Febrero de 2023

IMPORTANTE: Si se ve afectado por el hecho de que sus beneficios del SNAP vuelvan al monto estándar de la asignación federal y necesita ayuda alimentaria de emergencia, le recomendamos que se ponga en contacto con el Banco de Alimentos de Maryland (Maryland Food Bank) en https://mdfoodbank.org/find-food/ o con el Banco de Alimentos de la Zona Capital (Capital Area Food Bank)
en https://www.capitalareafoodbank.org/find-food-assistance/https://www.capitalareafoodbank.org/find-food-assistance/



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