Many
thanks to Sharon Soeller, a resource specialist in Southern California,
for allowing us to reprint her article first published in the "Drawing
Board" in November 1996.
I can
no longer call my students "learning disabled" because I now know
that most of them are quite "LEARNING ABLED!"
I have been a teacher
of the "learning disabled" for all of my teaching years and yet
it is only recently that I realized that many of my students who
were labeled as "learning disabled" were in fact right-brained learners!
I put two and two together about this when I took two workshops
within a couple of weeks of each other.
First, I was privileged
to attend Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain I and
II under the tutelage of Arlene Cartozian and Marka Hitt-Burns
this year at California State University, Long Beach. It was in
these classes that I began to learn how the brain functions.
A few weeks later I attended
a workshop entitled "Attention Focus" at the Stowell Learning Center
in Diamond Bar, California. It was at this workshop that I realized
many of the characteristics of the learning style of
the "learning disabled" were really right brain-mode characteristics.
These characteristics
include the spatial, the intuitive, the emotive, the creative, no
sense of time, the nonverbal, synthesis, the non-rational, and global
processing. Often these characteristics show up in my students as
difficulty processing information step-by-step, high visualization
skills, "leaving class" mentally, strong intelligence, creativity,
difficulty concentrating on L-mode subjects even for short periods
of time, and confusion with symbols (ABC's and 123's).
They sometimes have basic
reading skills, but have poor reading comprehension. They often
can process several trains of thought at one time, and they lack
awareness of the passage of time.
The right brain-mode
characteristics are very different than the left brain-mode characteristics.
It is the left-mode characteristics which are required by regular
classroom students: verbalization (being able to put your thoughts
into words on paper), analysis (as in doing steps in math sequences),
being able to categorize, digital thinking (as in counting), time
orientation (all tasks are to be completed within a time limit),
rationalizing (drawing conclusions), logical and linear thinking
styles.
I was able through the
years to think of several ways to get information across to my students
that I now know are right-mode techniques, but it was not until
I attended Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain and
the "Attention Focus" workshops that I realized I could begin increasing
my students' academic gains. Several methods were taught to me in
the "Attention Focus" workshop by Jill Stowell of the Stowell Learning
Center. Many of these techniques use right-mode characteristics
that result in left-mode learning.
Because I took the workshop
at the end of the '95-'96 school year, I had only a couple of weeks
to implement the new techniques I learned. I look forward to using
these new techniques during the '96-'97 school year.
I have included a list
of several books and methods on working with the "learning disabled"
that may help you with a loved one or a student who has been labeled
"Learning Disabled." These books may give you more of an understanding
of the kind of learner you are working with:
- You Don't
Have to be Dyslexic by Dr. Joan Smith, Ph.D., is available
through Learning Time Products, Inc., Sacramento, CA (800 50 LEARN.
This is a definite book on several methods and approaches to learning
through other than left-brain modes.
- Switching
On and Brain Gym by Paul Dennison, Ph.D. and Gail Dennison
are available through Edu-Kinesthetics, Inc. (800) 356-2109. These
books teach exercises that develop integration between the right
brain and left brain. I will be using the "Brain Gym" techniques
in my class this year.
- The Gift of
Dyslexia by Ronald Davis with Eldon Braun is available
from Ability Workshop Press, San Juan Capistrano, CA (800) 729-8990.
As a child, Ronald Davis was considered to be severely "dyslexic."
He shares his methods that teach attention focus and assist in
learning for those functioning using the right-mode of the brain.
Ronald Davis explains why dyslexic children who try to learn with
the left-mode methods are often labeled "attention deficit" (often
these children "leave the classroom" mentally because their spatial/visual
abilities are so greatly developed that apparently they are creating
highly entertaining "movies" in their own heads that are vastly
more fulfilling and less disorienting than the left-mode symbolic
ABC's and 123's). I will also be using these methods as taught
in his book in my classroom this year.
- Drawing on
the Right Side of the Brain and Drawing on the
Artist Within by Dr. Betty Edwards are available through
G.P. Putnam's Sons, New York and can be purchased or ordered at
any bookstore. By reading and working with these books, or by
taking a class in Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain, you
will have more of an understanding of how a "learning disabled"
person processes information. You will have the opportunity to
fully experience the right-mode processing as you learn to draw.
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