Believing in neuromyths makes neither a bad nor good student‐teacher: The relationship between neuromyths and academic achievement in teacher education
Mind, Brain, and Education, 2021•Wiley Online Library
Neuromyths have been discussed to detrimentally affect educational practice, but the
evidence for this assumption is still very scarce. We investigated whether 255 student‐
teacher'beliefs in neuromyths are related to their academic achievement (overall grade point
averages and first‐year practical courses). Believing or rejecting neuromyths that make no
direct assumptions about learners' educability was not related to academic achievement.
Believing in neuromyths that explicitly deny the educability of learners was only marginally …
evidence for this assumption is still very scarce. We investigated whether 255 student‐
teacher'beliefs in neuromyths are related to their academic achievement (overall grade point
averages and first‐year practical courses). Believing or rejecting neuromyths that make no
direct assumptions about learners' educability was not related to academic achievement.
Believing in neuromyths that explicitly deny the educability of learners was only marginally …
Abstract
Neuromyths have been discussed to detrimentally affect educational practice, but the evidence for this assumption is still very scarce. We investigated whether 255 student‐teacher' beliefs in neuromyths are related to their academic achievement (overall grade point averages and first‐year practical courses). Believing or rejecting neuromyths that make no direct assumptions about learners' educability was not related to academic achievement. Believing in neuromyths that explicitly deny the educability of learners was only marginally related to academic achievement. We conclude that self‐reported beliefs in neuromyths do not differentiate between high‐ and low‐achieving initial teacher education students.
Wiley Online Library