Civic reasoning depends on transcendent thinking: Implications of adolescent brain development for SEL

Mary Helen Immordino-Yang , Christina Kundrak , Douglas Knecht , Jamaal Matthews
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Abstract

Accumulating evidence from developmental social-affective neuroscience and educational research reveals striking affordances for adolescents’ academic, psychosocial and neural development of transcendent thinking—the disposition to integrate concrete, context-specific thinking and emotions into deliberations on the abstract, systems-level, ethical and personal implications of information, ideas, and skills. Here, we highlight the coordinated psychological and neural processes by which adolescents leverage transcendent thinking for civic reasoning. From qualitative field data, we argue that civic reasoning in the context of academic learning supports the coordination of conceptual understanding with intellectual agency, identity and communal orientation, leading youth toward process-oriented, rather than outcome-oriented, approaches to learning. From longitudinal interview and neuroimaging data, we argue that civic reasoning drives developmental coordination among brain networks involved in agency, self-awareness, and consciousness; internal reflection, abstraction and narrative; emotional feelings; memory; executive functioning and attention. These brain changes longitudinally predict resilience, identity development, and wellbeing (Gotlieb et al., 2024b). This transdisciplinary research underscores the power of civic reasoning for adolescents’ healthy development into young adulthood, and the benefits of schooling designed to center civic reasoning and personal reflection. In today’s globalized society, civic reasoning may be among the most important core social-emotional dispositions for youth and community thriving.

Impact statement

Civic reasoning is among the most important capacities youth must develop to sustain a functioning and equitable democratic society, and hence should be among the central aims of education. New research is demonstrating that adolescents’ dispositions toward civic reasoning, and the emotionally motivated transcendent thinking that undergirds it, are associated with a cascade of beneficial brain and psychosocial developmental effects that extend into young adulthood. Organizing adolescent education around civic reasoning and reflection could provide a powerful opportunity to support youths’ deep scholarly learning and psychosocial development in a coordinated way.
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公民推理取决于超越性思维:青少年大脑发育对 SEL 的影响
发展社会情感神经科学和教育研究的大量证据表明,青少年在学业、社会心理和神经方面的超越性思维--将具体的、特定情境下的思维和情感融入对信息、思想和技能的抽象的、系统层面的、伦理的和个人的影响的思考--的发展具有惊人的潜力。在此,我们强调青少年利用超越性思维进行公民推理的心理和神经协调过程。根据定性的实地数据,我们认为在学术学习的背景下,公民推理支持概念理解与智力机构、身份和社区取向之间的协调,从而引导青少年采取以过程为导向而非以结果为导向的学习方法。根据纵向访谈和神经影像学数据,我们认为公民推理推动了大脑网络之间的协调发展,这些网络涉及代理、自我意识和意识;内部反思、抽象和叙事;情绪情感;记忆;执行功能和注意力。这些大脑变化可纵向预测复原力、身份发展和幸福感(Gotlieb 等人,2024b)。这项跨学科研究强调了公民推理对青少年健康成长到青年时期的重要作用,以及以公民推理和个人反思为中心的学校教育的益处。在当今全球化的社会中,公民推理能力可能是青少年和社区蓬勃发展的最重要的核心社会情感素质之一。新的研究表明,青少年的公民推理能力以及作为其基础的情感动机的超越性思维,与一连串有益的大脑和社会心理发展效应相关联,这些效应会延续到青少年成年期。围绕公民推理和反思组织青少年教育可以提供一个有力的机会,以协调的方式支持青少年的深度学术学习和社会心理发展。
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