Archive for July, 2009

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50 Fun and Easy Brain Based Activities for Young Learners



User Ratings and Reviews

5 Stars 50 Brain Based Activities
Ellen Booth Church’s work is an excellent resource for parents and teachers. Education is constantly changing and coming up with new buzz words. The activities in this book are based on the one thing in education that has remained constant: How children retain, store, and retrieve learned information. The fact that this book is geared toward the primary grades reinforces the fact that these skills need to be taught early, so they can be built upon and reinforced throughout a child’s education and life. We want our children to become life long learners. This book is a great help in starting them on that path.

5 Stars Brain Research Made Understandable and FUN!
As a Kindergarten teacher it is sometimes difficult to take all the recent brain research and apply it to my classroom activities. This book does it all for me. The activities make the brain research come alive and provide me with great things I can do in my classroom that will support the cognitive growth of young children.
One of my favorite parts of the book is the “change the variable” activities at the end of each page. This section is filled with ideas for taking the main activity idea and extending it into many curriculum areas.
Plus everything is fun, easy and open-ended. I will use this book over and over again.

5 Stars 50 Fun & Easy Brain-Based Activities
Clear, fun and easy just like the title indicates! The activities are each described on one visually interesting page that invites the early childhood practitioner in. It begins with with a brief description of why and how the activities are beneficial and follows up with simple steps, skills, and materials for making the activity work. All pages end with a way to vary the the activity by changing one component.

5 Stars Good Food for the Brain
Ms. Booth Church has written a real winner here. This book is filled with many wonderful and practical classroom ideas. She is a great interpreter of often verbose and sometimes indecipherable research. She has been able to translate that into applications that are not only effective activities, but ones that include a series of useful follow ups.

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Vision Boards A Guidebook for Mapping Out Your Vision Vision Boards Workbook 1




A vision board is a large canvas where you paste pictures of all that you dream of achieving, having or experiencing. Native Americans built dream-catchers and used rocks, beads or feathers to symbolize their desires or wishes. They would place the dream-catchers in places where the wind blew, so that their wishes would become transparent to the universe— cleaned and brought forward from the realm of their mind into physical reality.

Building your vision board is a process of self-discovery and transformation. It is similar to a vision quest, only you do it in your own home in a step-by-step process. You focus on one area of your life such as relationships, money or your body. Then, you vision or bring that area of your life into alignment with your higher soul path.

As a psychic business coach, I have helped many people change their lives in a short time. Almost everyone Ive worked with has tons of Aha! moments along the way. If you had a choice: would you want to see your life as clearly and as focused as your higher self sees you? This is what vision mapping can do for you.

User Ratings and Reviews

5 Stars Intense and Intelligent
Detailed analysis of a “vision board quest” using personal examples from clients she has coached and applying them to your process. The book combines the author’s psychic perspective with the nuts and bolts of making a vision board and constructing a desired vision of your future. Strongly recommended for those who are serious about this kind of personal work.

5 Stars To see a visual path of what to expect in your future.
It is an amazing way to be able to visualize your future path and see what you are missing so one can make corrections early in life.I noticed Vicky has brought in new spiritual clarity not seen in other books. What a wonderful gift this would be for anyone you cherish.

5 Stars A NEW IMPROVED WAY OF VISIONING
This is not your typical “creating your vision” book. Vicky Lee provides the step-by-step instructions of how to create your vision plus more. The book is filled with examples of what happens during the journey of creating a vision board. She shows, through examples, how to identify your true vision and your major blocks. She shares tools that are not typical like how to utilize spiritual guides. For anyone wanting to make more money or lose weight, she provides wonderful successful examples. The book is beautifully illustrated with glossy colorful pages. By following what she suggests, the reader can not only create their Vision Board but become more intuitive as well.

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20 ways to promote brain based teaching and learning An article from Intervention in School and Clinic




This digital document is an article from Intervention in School & Clinic, published by Pro-Ed on March 1, 2002. The length of the article is 2607 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Citation Details
Title: 20 ways to …: promote brain-based teaching and learning.
Author: Debra J. Prigge
Publication: Intervention in School & Clinic (Refereed)
Date: March 1, 2002
Publisher: Pro-Ed
Volume: 37 Issue: 4 Page: 237(5)

Distributed by Thomson Gale

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Brain Based Therapy with Adults Evidence Based Treatment for Everyday Practice




Brain-Based Therapy with Adults: Evidence-Based Treatment for Everyday Practice provides a straightforward, integrated approach that looks at what we currently know about the brain and how it impacts and informs treatment interventions. Authors John Arden and Lloyd Linford, experts in neuroscience and evidence-based practice, reveal how this new kind of therapy takes into account the uniqueness of each client. Presentation of detailed background and evidence-based?interventions for common adult disorders such as anxiety and depression offers you expert advice you can put into practice immediately.

User Ratings and Reviews

5 Stars Informative and Inspiring
Both books provide current, informative and inspiring information about recent advances in brain research and implications for clinical psychology practice.

5 Stars Brain-Based Therapy with Adults
As neuroscience becomes a more and more evolved science, we cannot ignore its interaction with treatment and psychotherapy. This excellent, practical and down-to-earth book does just that: it helps the therapist understand the brain mechanisms involved in treatment. It also helps to explain to the client in a way that makes sense both how the brain influences behavior but also how change in behavior will change the brain.

5 Stars Excellent Synthesis
In their new work Brain-Based Therapy, Arden and Linford take us a step forward in the long overdue integration of neuroscience into everyday clinical practice. Combining extensive clinical experience with an in-depth exploration of neuroscience, they emerge with the BASE model of case conceptualization which places their neuroscientific perspective in the context of emotional attunement, multilayered systems issues, and evidence-based practice.

This work is a wonderful admixture of perspectives, as aspirational as applied, and a warning shot fired over the heads of those who want to hide safely within one way to conceptualize everyone who walks through the door. I would especially encourage new students to conceptualize their clients from this model before they are overcome with any of their teachers’ hardening of the categories.

5 Stars Relevant and non-dogmatic
Brain Based Therapy with Adults

By John B. Arden and Lloyd Linford

Book Review

By Thomas Cohen, D.M.H.

Speaking as a Clinical Psychologist who has been practicing and teaching over 35 years, it is rare to find a book that conveys this much relevance, usefulness and non-dogmatic instruction.

Why would anyone want to read yet another textbook on psychotherapy? Because this book combines not only the most up to date research on psychotherapy outcome studies, but presents diagnosis and treatment in a sensible manner that follows from and is faithful to that research.

Is the book biased towards the approach of the authors and thus, like most accounts of therapy, relegated to describing solipsistic opinions? Yes, but those opinions are based more on solid research and cutting edge discoveries in neuro-science, than any other book I have ever seen. I am a psychoanalyst and thus feel the book leans too heavily towards CBT, but those accounts of CBT are dedicated to specific diagnostic conditions (e.g. anxiety disorder and OCD) that have extensive research to back up the claims. Also, the descriptions of treatment are concise and extremely informative about how CBT therapy works. CBT treatment is presented in a balanced context of its own limitations, contra-indications and the strengths of other treatments such as psychodynamic and relational/intersubjective approaches.

Considering that, as a field of study, brain science is only at its fledging beginnings, do we even know enough to create an approach that utilizes the rapidly growing body of information about how the brain works? I questioned how one could make the leap from the neuro-scientific laboratory to the consulting room. This book not only illuminates how brain studies can be applied to clinical work, but it beautifully simplifies the complexity of brain functioning into a language that can be effectively described to patients and therapeutically applied to relieve their suffering. It describes how clinicians can use brain studies to empathically bridge the gap between their own clinically distant theoretical explanations and the patient’s need for understanding.

Is reading the book worth the effort? For me, the answer is a qualified yes. More than most psychotherapy books, this one created cognitive dissonance for me. For instance, I am biased towards psychoanalytic approaches to therapy and while this book does give ample weight to the psychodynamic, it emphasizes other approaches. However, its resounding emphasis is on what I would call the “intangible” aspects of therapy (what the authors describe as “common elements”). Arden and Linford state that one’s method of therapy accounts for only 5% of the therapeutic success outcome measurements. Most of the variance is due to relational factors.

It is the non-verbal, emotional and interpersonal resonances that occur in the right brain-to-right brain, limbic system-to-limbic system interactions between patient and therapist that create the therapeutic relationship. This process is at the heart of the vivid and varied descriptions of the therapeutic process that this book portrays and, as such, makes it so worthwhile to read.

Finally, I imagine that many beginning, intermediate and even advanced level therapists could find this book a wealth of information for how to assess and treat the major diagnoses that confront us in our daily clinical practices: depression, anxiety, panic, OCD and PTSD. It is elegant in its succinct, innovative, practical and cutting edge approach to the challenges of psychotherapeutic practice.

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Brain Based Teaching With Adolescent Learning in Mind




Presents the newest research on the adolescent brain and offers a framework for linking brain-based teaching to students’ social, emotional, and cognitive needs.

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Prospect Mapping Out Your Future

Prospect Mapping Out Your Future




Your future lies largely in your own hands. This is the basic premise of this book.

It is about facing your future, planning your destiny and working towards your personal goals. Besides exploring the meaning of life and the future of individuals, it also takes a look at the future of enterprices and their employees. At the same time, it sheds light on issues like choosing your employers, developing yourself, being your own boss, enhancing your company’s competitiveness and much more. Blending sensible philosophy with practical advice, it elucidates the truth on today’s complicated working world.

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Accelerated Learning in Practice Brain based Methods for Accelerating Motivation And Achievement




This work offers nine principles for brain-based approaches to accelerating learning, improving motivation and raising achievement. It offers the reader a coherent structure and describes: guaranteed ways to motivate learners; esteem-building tools for schools, teachers and parents; how to access and teach to different types of intelligence; and 17 different ways in which schools can make accelerated learning work.

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Brain Based Learning The New Science of Teaching and Training Revised Edition



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Brain Based Learning The New Paradigm of Teaching




Discover a learning approach tuned to the brain’s natural way of learning. These strategies help reduce discipline problems, overcome learning difficulties, and increase graduation rates.

User Ratings and Reviews

5 Stars This explains a lot!
Reading this book was fascinating! The brain is an amazing organ and this book presents the facts in a way that will capture and hold your interest.

5 Stars Brain based Learning
This is a text book I ordered for my classes for teacher certification. This book is very easy to read, and I am really enjoying it. It presents info and then at the end of a section, recaptures the essence of the reading for you. I would suggest it for any teaching class. I am learning so much from this book. I have been buying all my text books from Amazon because they are so much cheaper, and sometimes I can get free shipping. So far, there has not been a book that I could not find here at Amazon.

1 Star Multilevel marketing meets education
I had to purchase this book for a community college class I’m taking. As a “textbook,” it has been a complete disappointment. The “science” is sketchy, the research is shoddy, and the huge holes in logic are brushed over with explanations like “you can’t prove nearly anything empirically in education” (straight from page 8!). Some of the concepts presented are interesting, but since Mr. Jensen (no, he doesn’t hold a doctorate) provides almost no citations for his claims, there is no way to check his assertions or determine where the theories come from. The book reads like a multilevel marketing sales pitch. In fact, you are encouraged to share it with your friends and colleagues and are directed to a website where you could empty your bank account getting “certified” in Mr. Jensen’s unique, “empirically unproven” techniques.

5 Stars Every teacher should read
Great book!!! It explains the way our brain learn and how teachers can teach effectively.

5 Stars “Brain Based Learning” is a masterpiece
“Brain Based Learning” suggests a new style of teaching that activates student brains and makes them an active participant in the learning process. Author Eric Jensen is absolutely brilliant with his delivery of this material. His writing style is engaging, profound and insightful. I’m so impressed with the way to weaves together a variety of sources to present his idea for personal transformation. Never before have I read a book that combines material on stress reduction, fight-or-flight, activating both hemispheres of the brain, and flow states– and applied it to education.

Seriously, this book is a masterpiece! You don’t have to be a teacher to gleam something from “Brain Based Learning” — it is also insightful for entrepeniurs, marketers and writers. If you listen to brain synch cds, use light and sound machines, or do any sort of AVE (audio visual entrainment), reading this book will rock your world. I highly recommend this book!

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Unleashing the Power of Perceptual Change The Potential of Brain Based Teaching




Renate and Geoffrey Caine believe that education today is like Dr. Dolittle’s “Push me-Pull you” creature, with a head at each end, making it face two directions. One piece is moving forward, another wants to go back, and the middle feels the tension. That tension is what creates opportunities for new possibilities. In the new ASCD book Education on the Edge of Possibility, the Caines begin to explore those possibilities by detailing how they strived to bring their theory of learning to life in two schools. Their theory is based on a wholistic interpretation of brain research in which brain, mind, and body work together to form a dynamic unity.

Unleashing the Power of Perceptual Change continues their exploration by unveiling what the authors call perceptual orientations, differing views of reality that frame the ways people think about education and teaching. The Caines believe that unleashing genuine student potential requires educators with a particular outlook on reality. That outlook includes an appreciation for the interconnectedness of everything.

In the authors’ view, the key to successfully transforming education so that students guide their own learning lies in educators’ ability to transform themselves, to change their perceptual orientation. This book documents the voyage of exploration as the Caines watched teachers change from individuals who use traditional teaching and beliefs about learning to those who are at home with messy, rich, complex environments where possibility and opportunity rule. Their approach provides a glimpse of the many options open to educators.

User Ratings and Reviews

5 Stars Brilliant and Inspired
While I am slightly amused by the negative reviewer’s clever (if vapid) flare in creating new words to criticize the book and the author’s self-congratulatory defense (giving herself five stars, of course), I have to say this book is a rare blessing–the authors have combined a deeply felt passion (not only about education but about society in general) with a rigorous study of educational systems and emerging research in neuroscience. In truth, I can’t fault them for congratulating themselves because I too wish to congratulate them for their efforts. As a teacher who often feels frustrated and even demoralized by a seemingly absurd educational system, I am inspired by their elegant diagnosis and prescription for change. It has helped me to radically expand my notion of what education is and what it can do.

1 Star Pseudo-science. Pure propaganda for constructivism.
As if U.S. schools were not saturated with enough child-damaging fads (whole language, constructivism, discovery learning, developmentally appropriate practices), the Caines try to provide a “scientific” foundation for faddish twaddle by deriving instructional practices from brain research that is considered questionable by brain researchers themselves. This sort of bunk will appeal to morons: i.e, self-styled, knee-jerk “progressive” miseducators and education “deformers.”. . .

5 Stars Author’s note
Our book reports on reseach conducted with teachers, administrators and university students and faculty. What we suggest is that beliefs about good teaching run along a continuum. At one end is the belief in traditional teaching that must include teacher delivery of facts and skills to be memorized. It asserts that most learners must be coerced into learning. At the other end of the continuum we have the whole language, constructivist view which believes that the learner must be meaningfully engaged in learning. We conclude that these individuals at opposite ends of the continuum inevitably can not communicate with each other. The reviews represented here prove our point perfectly.

5 Stars Teaching for compliance or for self-efficacy?
Through examining and categorizing teaching techniques as presented in a diversity of teacher interviews,the Caines continue their pursuit of understanding and maximizing the potential of brain-based learning. They draw distintions between the all too prevalent practices which lead to downshifting, a kind of brain function regression, in contrast to the conditions a teacher can provide which honor the student as a human being on a quest for life’s personal meaning, the teacher and the student on a mutual search for self-efficacy. Teachers seeking new perspectives will find themselves drawn into the realm of education on the edge of possibility and faced with some serious soul-searching as they examine and question their own teaching. At least I did.

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