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Whole Brain Learning (WBL), is an alternative approach to integral learning/ teaching process advocated in the Philippines by Dr. Perla Rizalina M. Tayko and Perla S. Intia.〔(【引用サイトリンク】 title=Whole Brain )〕 "Learning to Read, Reading to Learn", is the Philippine-published reference book for this concept. The concept is wholly based on the BrainMap model, pioneered in the United States by Dudley Lynch, creater of The BrainMap(R) assessment inventory. In a recently published book entitled ''Whole Brain Literacy for Whole Brain Learning'' by Perla Rizalina M. Tayko, Ph.D. and Marina L. Reyes-Talmo, Ph.D., (2010) the concept and processes of whole brain literacy (WBL) is expanded, differentiated and deepened in its philosophy, perspective, paradigm, processes and application of these to the development of human potential. WBL has many dimensions and definitions. Initially it is defined as an approach or modality of instruction, a technique in asking questions for a dialogic interaction and/or a strategy for curriculum and development. As a perspective, WBL advances the new philosophy of education that draws out the potentials of every learner from the gift of thought and developing it from within or from "inside out" much more than from "outside in" or imposed framework of thinking through processes. The authors, Tayko and Talmo used the term "humanology" to distinguish WBL from other approaches if only to emphasize that the technology being taught to learners are the "human technology" latent in every human being – the whole brain functioning which are based on Lynch's four-brain model, detailed in such books as "The BrainMap Workbook", "Strategy of the Dolphin", and "Your Dolphin High-Performance Business Brain". The four-brain processes as identified and exemplified below and as such WBL taps into these whole brain quadrants through "wending/iterating" as well as "connecting" or weaving as it were on a center core called "core purpose" Whole Brain Literacy (WBL) can be described as the circulation the human thinking system through brain quadrants described by Lynch in his BrainMap model: I-Control, I-Explore, I-Pursue, and I-Preserve. The circulation has no need to be in order. However, the key idea is to think through all four quadrants. Lynch described the core information-seeking questions for the quadrants as follows: I-Control: What I know now? I-Explore: What I want to try? I-Pursue: How to do it? I-Preserve: How do I feel? ==References== 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Whole brain literacy」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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