Do Our Minds Think Alike In-Depth December 2014, Issue 2, Vol 50.

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IN-DEPTH

December 2014

8

DO OUR MINDS

By In-Depth Editors Billy Jump and Sydney Kirwan

The differences between analytical and creative thought depend more on one’s perception of reality, not which part of the brain they use more Senior Susan Kim finishes her AP Calculus homework, checking every step to make sure she did not forget anything. She then moves on to her AP Physics homework, studying projectile motion and centripetal force in preparation for her mid-term. According to Kim, most students view her as just a math and science kid because she excels at critical thinking and analysis. However, the perception that Kim is only a math student is just as wrong as the idea that a person’s mind is limited to only one type of thought. “I like art and music,” Kim said. “People think that I’m only a math person, but I’m actually very interested in visual arts, music, and dance.” Although multifaceted students like Kim appreciate the qualities of all subjects, there are often qualities that students who excel in certain subjects share. According to the right-brain left-brain dominance theory, language arts, visual arts, and music relate more to the right side of the brain. Mathematics and science relate more to the left side of the brain. Math and science students often have “a natural curiosity of the world,” physics teacher Patricia Thoma said. “Science students are generally very strong in math, but they like to know how the world works. Biologists want to decipher DNA. Physicists want to get to the moon and the stars.” This same sentiment is shared by mathematics teacher George Appleby. “[Math and science students] have an interest in mathematics. There is a definitive answer and they like that,” Appleby said. “Ultimately, they have a motivation to do well in math. They are driven students.” However, in theory, the right-brain left-brain dominance theory would limit students’ ability to be multifaceted and excel in various subject areas. “I don’t believe in the theory,” Kim said. “I don’t think that students are only good at one subject.” However, students perceive reality differently, and according to art teacher Bruno Baran, this makes all the difference. “I definitely believe that we artists perceive the world differently,” Baran said. “I constantly hammer my students on that idea. We are the ones who stop the car to look

at something beautiful on the road.” Research by Brooklyn College and the Graduate Center of the City University of New York suggests that those who are talented in art are able to override visual misperceptions of size, shape, and color, to which Baran agrees entirely. Thought that was traditionally attributed to the right-side of the brain — creativity, emotion, art — is most prevalent among the humanities subjects. The visual perception that artists often pick up on is similar to the auditory perception that is necessary for students who excel in foreign language. “I think that if students have a musical ear, then they can hear the sound of the language and reproduce it,” Spanish teacher Deirdre Magner said. “Some students cannot hear the rhythm of the language and reproduce it, and it makes sense to them.” As an international student from South Korea, Kim feels that English has always been a barrier, so excelling in math and science is simpler, but this is not what she feels accurately defines her. “I do not want to limit my interest to just math and science, I want to be great at English and other things,” she said. “I play the guitar and I even danced at one of the pep rallies.” Regardless of the subject, however, the work ethic of the student dictates how well they will perform in the class. “I teach students who have an outstanding ability to do math, but [sometimes] they just do not put in the work,” Appleby said. “Students need to do their homework and want to learn. They can’t slack off and expect to do well. When I find a student who works hard, [he or she] is truly a privilege to teach.” Practice makes perfect. Just like a brain can be trained to view the world as Picasso or Andy Warhol did, working hard in a subject can develop the skills necessary for success.

How do our minds thin

Since the dawn of academia, the di minds has always been clear. For ev stein, for every Newton a Beethoven. megaminds different? Traditionally, psychologists split the right and the left — and attribute hemisphere. According to the right who are more creative and emotiona analytical thinkers and excel in the m This theory is based on the latera ing to North Shore Pediatric Therap to provide an evidence-based for pe complex and ongoing process by whi over the functioning of specific beha In other words, certain functions brain. According to NSPT, the right the position of objects in space, und


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