There is no age to learn!

PSYCHOLOGY TODAY N Y

Yes, you can learn at any age!

“I am too old to learn,” many people have had this reflection at key times
in their adult lives. But what is it really like? Do our learning abilities
really have an expiration date?

>From birth, we mobilize a large part of our mental functions, such as
attention, perception, memory, and motor skills, in order to acquire new
knowledge and new skills. Learning means constantly processing new
information, storing it in our memory and being able to request it at our
convenience. This phenomenon occurs with each new experience we live and
involves complex processes, which must first be understood before
considering how they change with age.

Concretely, how does that happen in the brain?

After each new experience, our brain's activity is slightly modified, as if
it were keeping an imprint. More precisely, neurons, in connection with
experience, change the way in which they “communicate” with each other: the
communication points between neurons, called “synapses”, are strengthened
or weakened . At the level of the entire brain, these modifications cause
major changes in activity and organization, we then speak of brain
plasticity . This dynamic is relatively rapid; in just a few weeks of
learning, it is possible to observe structural (network reorganization) and
functional (activity level) changes in specific regions of the brain. It is
also reversible, since at the definitive end of the learning in question,
the traces of it “disappear” .

‍All equal when it comes to brain plasticity

The question then is to understand whether the brain remains malleable at
all ages, and this question has been studied extensively by research.

During childhood and adolescence, learning is rich and consistent (walking,
speaking, reading, writing, counting...) and our brain makes plasticity
work at full speed. For this reason, researchers in developmental
psychology have long believed that brain plasticity is only limited to
childhood and adolescence and that as we age, the more our neural networks
become frozen and our brains lose their ability to be malleable . But more
recently, thanks to technical tools such as brain imaging, this theory has
been questioned. Several dozen studies on the subject have reached the same
conclusion: nothing is fixed in our brain, it is endowed with plasticity
regardless of our age! No, there is no age to learn!

Of course, we cannot deny the impact of normal cognitive aging, which has
consequences on attentional, memory, and motor processes in particular. In
some contexts, it will take longer for people aged 65 compared to people
aged 20 for the same apprenticeship in order to reach the same level of
performance .

Valuing learning for all

Unfortunately, the belief that you can't learn as an adult is widely held.
Its first danger is that it makes us abandon all learning efforts after a
certain age. The second is that it impacts how we think about lifelong
learning in our society.

La cognitive science research However, it shows us that learning is a
lifelong process. The plasticity of the brain is such that even seniors are
still able to learn and acquire new knowledge; their sharper judgment and
reasoning skills are even beneficial for them to engage in new learning
 .Thus, the main principles of learning are not effective exclusively
during schooling, but they also apply throughout adult life: in higher
education, in their profession, in their personal life. There is no age to
learn! Base adult education  on major principles demonstrated by cognitive
psychology means effectively promoting sustainable learning... at any age!

KR IRS 121125

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