Steve and I discuss his book, How to Motivate Your Students to Love Learning, which is both a memoir and a guide for teachers and students to optimize the learning experience for intrinsic motivation. Steve taught neuroscience and engineering courses while running his own lab studying the activity of live cultured neural populations (which we discuss at length in his previous episode). He relentlessly tested and tweaked his teaching methods, including constant feedback from the students, to optimize their learning experiences. He settled on real-world, project-based learning approaches, like writing wikipedia articles and helping groups of students design and carry out their own experiments. We discuss that, plus the science behind learning, principles important for motivating students and maintaining that motivation, and many of the other valuable insights he shares in the book.

The first half of the episode we discuss diverse neuroscience and AI topics, like brain organoids, mind-uploading, synaptic plasticity, and more. Then we discuss many of the stories and lessons from his book, which I recommend for teachers, mentors, and life-long students who want to ensure they're optimizing their own  learning.

Potter Lab.Twitter: @stevempotter.The Book: How to Motivate Your Students to Love Learning.The glial cell activity movie.

0:00 - Intro

6:38 - Brain organoids

18:48 - Glial cell plasticity

24:50 - Whole brain emulation

35:28 - Industry vs. academia

45:32 - Intro to book: How To Motivate Your Students To Love Learning

48:29 - Steve's childhood influences

57:21 - Developing one's own intrinsic motivation

1:02:30 - Real-world assignments

1:08:00 - Keys to motivation

1:11:50 - Peer pressure

1:21:16 - Autonomy

1:25:38 - Wikipedia real-world assignment

1:33:12 - Relation to running a lab

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