Susan is joined by Ioulia Kovelman, Ph.D., professor in the Department of Psychology at the University of Michigan, to give educators the perspective of a developmental cognitive neuroscientist on literacy development. Starting with the basics of cognitive science versus brain science, Ioulia gives a comprehensive overview into how the brain changes as children learn to read, including differences seen in neurodiverse students and multilingual/English learners. Ioulia then answers a question from our listener mailbag on neuroscience and dyslexia and how current research can inform teaching strategies. Ioulia ends with a rallying message that scientists, teachers, and children cannot stand alone and need to find ways to connect with each other to strengthen literacy as a whole.Show notes:
Quotes:“We are different learners. And these are really different learners. And by giving them literacy instruction, targeted literacy instruction, we are changing their brains. But that doesn't mean we're making them the same.” —Ioulia Kovelman, Ph.D.****“We talked about languages being different. They're exercising slightly different muscles of your language system.” —Ioulia Kovelman, Ph.D.
“Science is informed by teachers and children. We're all together. I do not teach children. Teachers don't usually do science. But we have to find ways of connecting with each other.” —Ioulia Kovelman, Ph.D.
Episode timestamps* *02:00 Introduction: Who is Ioulia?06:00 Cognitive science vs brain science08:00 How the brain changes as children learn to read11:00 Following brain development for children that struggle with language development14:00 Physical differences in brain development between the average brain and a neurodiverse brain17:00 Mailbag question: Neuroscience and dyslexia20:00 How neuroscience informs teaching strategies for children with dyslexia25:00 Monolingual vs multilingual brains33:00 Language literacy lab38:00 Connecting research to classroom instruction41:00 Final thoughtsTimestamps are approximate, rounded to nearest minute**