New Research Affirms: Teachers Should Trust Student Behavior Over Brain Scans to Assess Learning
A recent analysis challenges the growing emphasis on “brain-based learning” in education, arguing that observable student behavior remains the definitive sign of learning – not neural imaging or neuroscience theories. As Thai schools increasingly adopt neuroscience language and training, the research offers a timely reminder that practical, classroom-based observation is the foundation of good teaching and sound assessment. This perspective, recently articulated in Psychology Today by an experienced cognitive science educator, reinforces a classic principle: it is performance, not pathology, that shows whether students are truly learning (Psychology Today).