Is this the solution to our educational crisis or just more hype?
I have spent 16 years trying to solve the riddle of "Learning Disabilities." After working directly with over a thousand Dyslexic, Hyperactive, Attention Deficit Disorder (A.D.D.) and "hopeless learning disabled students," I now believe that what some label as "learning disabilities" may instead be a shortcoming of some teaching methods and school curriculums.
I am one of those "learning disabled" students. I couldn’t take a multiple-choice test well or read and retain information effectively in school. I struggled with all the signs of Attention Deficit Disorder (A.D.D.). I was a daydreamer, a compulsive talker, and I couldn’t stay focused on any subject unless I was stimulated by the material or had an internal desire to learn it. I was never formally diagnosed with A.D.D. and didn’t understand that I was a kinesthetic learner—one who learns by doing—until 10 years after I graduated from college. My husband teases me often with, “You may not know where Bhutan or Tanzania are, but you’re pretty smart when it comes to living life.” I learn by doing, so I guess I make things happen in life by default!

By my second semester of college, I learned what time of day my brain received information best and how to switch my negative self-talk into positive self-talk. I also learned how to effectively communicate with some of my professors about my learning style, which resulted in two of them giving me a different testing format than the rest of the class. Because of these few insights into my unique learning style, I studied almost half as much as I had in the past. I went from a 2.3 G.P.A. my first semester of college to a 3.5 G.P.A. I didn’t get smarter, I just learned an aspect or two of how I learn. I agree with the adults who have graduated from EmpowerMind®, "If I’d only known then what I know now, after taking EmpowerMind®, . . ."

Let’s try an analogy. Let’s say our brains are like computers, and we have classrooms of computers (students). Many teachers are cramming Apple software into IBM computers. But there is no converter to make a connection; therefore, learning does not take place. However, like the computer, if a converter is created for students which helps them discover how they learn, then students will learn. Learning to learn creates that converter and facilitates effective learning. It helps students learn to think for themselves.

If a student is a visual learner and has a good imagination, then that student can take auditory information and convert it into mental imagery. For example, I taught twelve "hopeless" students to learn the prologue to Romeo and Juliet using this method. Once they were shown how to imagine the words as pictures in their heads, they remembered them. We also put the prologue to a rap music beat, so those who learned rhythmically could also be reinforced by the beat of the words in addition to the pictures. The more senses the students use to learn something, the better chance they have of retaining the information they have learned. These students learned the 14 lines of the prologue verbatim in only one session and retained 100% four weeks later. Because the students learn how to do this for themselves, they own their own mental converter. I don’t need to be there for them to convert it for them; they can convert it themselves and learn to take responsibility for their own learning process, no matter who their teacher is, what school they attend, or what material they are learning.

Here’s an example of the conversion process taking place within the student and without my physical proximity. By the end of third grade, eight years-old, Zach didn’t know most of his multiplication tables. It was because he had been taught in a left brain style, when in reality he was a right brain learner. So, he just learned to convert it himself. Zach looked at two 7s next to each other for 7x7 and the two 7s looked like upside down feet to him. So he pictured the upside down feet in his mind. Then he looked at 49 and thought of the 49ers in his mind. Then he attached the two pictures together. He saw the upside down feet belonging to the 49ers, and they were all running upside down. So when he saw 7x7, he thought of the upside down feet which reminded him of the 49ers. He used this method of association and learned the eight multiplication tables he could not previously learn. He learned them in less than 10 minutes, and he retained the answers without much review.

Another example, I just tutored a student, Garrett, a few months ago who at age 10 still could not recite 12 of his multiplication tables. His mom was at her wits end: the once a week tutoring since kindergarten, the expense, the hours of painful homework, the extra help the school was trying to provide, and yet nothing was working. Garrett was easy for me because he’s a kinesthetic learner and he’s 12, so if I associate anything to bodily functions and we act them out it’s like magic. For instance, I asked him what a 4 looked like or did it remind him of anything. He said he loves dogs and dogs have four legs, so he said, “A dog.” (It may sound like a stretch for you, but if it works for him- it works.) So, I had us both get down, on all fours, on the floor next to each other (four times four) and bark like dogs, then we looked up and imagined a “sick teen” (sixteen) coming into the room. (Fortunately, I don’t have video cameras in my basement or it could get hard to explain.) Anyway, after the 75 minute session he got all 12 multiplication tables perfectly and performed them for his mom when she arrived. His mom got teary-eyed and just couldn’t believe it. It’ so easy for all children to learn, when they are taught in the way they learn best.

A 12-year old boy named Donald had an I.Q. of 168. The school system said he was "learning disabled." He was labeled A.D.H.D. and was an incessant talker. When I gave him the opportunity to doodle and build a clothes pin model, while listening to an auditory exercise, he got 22 out of 24 questions correct after hearing the auditory exercise only once. If he hadn’t been allowed to doodle and keep his hands active, he would have reversed his score, (which is what he was experiencing in the school system). When he went back to school, his teachers were astonished! They called his mother to find out what had happened to Donald. The secret was that he had uncovered the mystery of how he learns. The school now lets Donald doodle.

When schools have curriculums that help students discover their own way of learning, children’s chances for success increase. This can start in early elementary school and be reinforced in middle and high school. When students learn to learn and think for themselves, they can use it in all aspects of their lives. Students are less likely to drop out of school and have degrading labels attached to their learning process. These tools for success can be applied to any field of study that they choose to explore, regardless of the constantly changing needs of our society.

For more information on Kimberly’s company, based in Commerce Michigan, her EmpowerMind learning to learn workshops, her books or upcoming documentary, visit www.empowermind.com or youtube.com/empowermindIs this the solution to our educational crisis or just more hype?

I have spent 16 years trying to solve the riddle of "Learning Disabilities." After working directly with over a thousand Dyslexic, Hyperactive, Attention Deficit Disorder (A.D.D.) and "hopeless learning disabled students," I now believe that what some label as "learning disabilities" may instead be a shortcoming of some teaching methods and school curriculums.
I am one of those "learning disabled" students. I couldn’t take a multiple-choice test well or read and retain information effectively in school. I struggled with all the signs of Attention Deficit Disorder (A.D.D.). I was a daydreamer, a compulsive talker, and I couldn’t stay focused on any subject unless I was stimulated by the material or had an internal desire to learn it. I was never formally diagnosed with A.D.D. and didn’t understand that I was a kinesthetic learner—one who learns by doing—until 10 years after I graduated from college. My husband teases me often with, “You may not know where Bhutan or Tanzania are, but you’re pretty smart when it comes to living life.” I learn by doing, so I guess I make things happen in life by default!

By my second semester of college, I learned what time of day my brain received information best and how to switch my negative self-talk into positive self-talk. I also learned how to effectively communicate with some of my professors about my learning style, which resulted in two of them giving me a different testing format than the rest of the class. Because of these few insights into my unique learning style, I studied almost half as much as I had in the past. I went from a 2.3 G.P.A. my first semester of college to a 3.5 G.P.A. I didn’t get smarter, I just learned an aspect or two of how I learn. I agree with the adults who have graduated from EmpowerMind®, "If I’d only known then what I know now, after taking EmpowerMind®, . . ."

Let’s try an analogy. Let’s say our brains are like computers, and we have classrooms of computers (students). Many teachers are cramming Apple software into IBM computers. But there is no converter to make a connection; therefore, learning does not take place. However, like the computer, if a converter is created for students which helps them discover how they learn, then students will learn. Learning to learn creates that converter and facilitates effective learning. It helps students learn to think for themselves.

If a student is a visual learner and has a good imagination, then that student can take auditory information and convert it into mental imagery. For example, I taught twelve "hopeless" students to learn the prologue to Romeo and Juliet using this method. Once they were shown how to imagine the words as pictures in their heads, they remembered them. We also put the prologue to a rap music beat, so those who learned rhythmically could also be reinforced by the beat of the words in addition to the pictures. The more senses the students use to learn something, the better chance they have of retaining the information they have learned. These students learned the 14 lines of the prologue verbatim in only one session and retained 100% four weeks later. Because the students learn how to do this for themselves, they own their own mental converter. I don’t need to be there for them to convert it for them; they can convert it themselves and learn to take responsibility for their own learning process, no matter who their teacher is, what school they attend, or what material they are learning.
Here’s an example of the conversion process taking place within the student and without my physical proximity. By the end of third grade, eight years-old, Zach didn’t know most of his multiplication tables. It was because he had been taught in a left brain style, when in reality he was a right brain learner. So, he just learned to convert it himself. Zach looked at two 7s next to each other for 7x7 and the two 7s looked like upside down feet to him. So he pictured the upside down feet in his mind. Then he looked at 49 and thought of the 49ers in his mind. Then he attached the two pictures together. He saw the upside down feet belonging to the 49ers, and they were all running upside down. So when he saw 7x7, he thought of the upside down feet which reminded him of the 49ers. He used this method of association and learned the eight multiplication tables he could not previously learn. He learned them in less than 10 minutes, and he retained the answers without much review.

Another example, I just tutored a student, Garrett, a few months ago who at age 10 still could not recite 12 of his multiplication tables. His mom was at her wits end: the once a week tutoring since kindergarten, the expense, the hours of painful homework, the extra help the school was trying to provide, and yet nothing was working. Garrett was easy for me because he’s a kinesthetic learner and he’s 12, so if I associate anything to bodily functions and we act them out it’s like magic. For instance, I asked him what a 4 looked like or did it remind him of anything. He said he loves dogs and dogs have four legs, so he said, “A dog.” (It may sound like a stretch for you, but if it works for him- it works.) So, I had us both get down, on all fours, on the floor next to each other (four times four) and bark like dogs, then we looked up and imagined a “sick teen” (sixteen) coming into the room. (Fortunately, I don’t have video cameras in my basement or it could get hard to explain.) Anyway, after the 75 minute session he got all 12 multiplication tables perfectly and performed them for his mom when she arrived. His mom got teary-eyed and just couldn’t believe it. It’ so easy for all children to learn, when they are taught in the way they learn best.

A 12-year old boy named Donald had an I.Q. of 168. The school system said he was "learning disabled." He was labeled A.D.H.D. and was an incessant talker. When I gave him the opportunity to doodle and build a clothes pin model, while listening to an auditory exercise, he got 22 out of 24 questions correct after hearing the auditory exercise only once. If he hadn’t been allowed to doodle and keep his hands active, he would have reversed his score, (which is what he was experiencing in the school system). When he went back to school, his teachers were astonished! They called his mother to find out what had happened to Donald. The secret was that he had uncovered the mystery of how he learns. The school now lets Donald doodle.

When schools have curriculums that help students discover their own way of learning, children’s chances for success increase. This can start in early elementary school and be reinforced in middle and high school. When students learn to learn and think for themselves, they can use it in all aspects of their lives. Students are less likely to drop out of school and have degrading labels attached to their learning process. These tools for success can be applied to any field of study that they choose to explore, regardless of the constantly changing needs of our society.

For more information on Kimberly’s company, based in Commerce Michigan, her EmpowerMind learning to learn workshops, her books or upcoming documentary, visit www.empowermind.com or call 800-272-4675 or call 800-272-4675.

Author's Bio: 

Passionate about Learning -
Determined to Make a Difference!

Kimberly Kassner, founder of EmpowerMind, attended accredited schools in Michigan. Year after year teachers described her as a student that: “talked too much … short attention span… easily bored.” She enjoyed school, but it seemed that only Kimberly understood that she learned differently from HOW teachers were teaching! Fortunately, she was determined enough not to give up and wise enough to discover how SHE learned best! Kimberly tapped into her learning strengths and developed – DIFFERENT YET EFFECTIVE – study techniques. Her new methods proved to be successful! Kimberly passed exams, earned good grades, and was accepted into Central Michigan University (CMU). However, her first semester at CMU presented an even greater challenge. Kim quickly realized that there weren’t enough hours in a day/week to keep using her current methods of studying to pass college exams. Her learning style needed to adapt to keep up with the university’s work load and get good grades. Through a lot of trial and error, by her senior year at CMU, she uncovered her first three secrets to effective learning! With just a few new study strategies she was able to take 22 credit hours and earn a 4.0! ALL this without studying past 5:00 p.m. on weekdays or studying at all on the weekends! She graduated Cum Laude with a Bachelor of Science in Communications and Psychology! For more
http://empowermind.com/bios/kim/kassner.html