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Showing posts with the label Knowledge Construction

No Teachers, Only Learners: Redesigning Schooling Through Brainpage Theory

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Modern schools are built on a teaching-centered model — a teacher explains, and students listen. Yet deep learning rarely emerges from listening alone. The human brain learns through doing, mapping, practicing, and solving. Brainpage Theory challenges the traditional paradigm by proposing a complete shift from teaching-based instruction to learner-driven knowledge transfer. Learning Without Lectures: Architecture of System Learnography In this redesigned system, there are no teachers — only learners, scholars, and performers who build mastery through book-to-brain processing, miniature schools, and zeidpage execution. The classroom becomes a place of active cognition and motor learning, not passive listening. This comprehensive article explores how Brainpage Theory and the Taxshila Model enable a zero-teaching school ecosystem, aligning learning with taxshila neuroscience, motor science, and the natural architecture of the human brain. Brainpage Theory and system learnography propose a...

Pottery Wheel and the Thalamus of Brain: Shaping Clay, Shaping Knowledge

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Research Introduction This article explores a unique analogy between the pottery wheel and the thalamus of human brain, highlighting their shared role as the dynamic centers of transformation. In pottery, spinning wheel allows a potter to mold shapeless clay into a functional and artistic form through deliberate motor actions and tactile feedback. Similarly, in human brain, the thalamus serves as a central relay station, processing sensory inputs and coordinating motor responses. These actions shape the brain’s internal structure of knowledge, known as brainpage modules in learnography. By comparing the potter’s craft to the process of learning, this article emphasizes the importance of motor science, task-based engagement, and sensory-motor integration in effective knowledge transfer. Obviously, learnography is a system of active knowledge transfer, where learning is constructed through action. The concept of learnography reframes academic learning as an active and brain-centered proc...