- Read Chapter 6 "" A Path to the Future"
- Use complete sentences to answer the following questions. Each response should be at least a 5 sentence paragraph
- Are you a Lumper or a Splitter
- Which tips are easiest to apply when trying to bridge the hemispheres
- Who do you think is responsible for handedness
- What are the challenges that come to mind when discussing/thinking handedness
C h
a p
ter6
"A P
ath to
th e F
uture": H
em isp
h eres, L
e a
rn in
g S
tyles, H an
d ed
n ess,
an d
G en
d er D
ifferen ces
A gu
idan ce cou
n selo
r on ce recom
m end
ed th at a ninth grade boy
w h
o w as h
aving academ ic difficulty be given only ten
m inutes of
h om
ew ork each n
ight. T he reason? S
he claim ed the boy w
as "right b
rain ed
" an d
couldn 't b
e expected to concentrate norm ally. H
is parents
sensibly refused
to go
along w ith
this idea,
w hich,
unfortun ately, is n
o t th
e only peculiar one th at em
erged w hen
research about the tw o hem
ispheres becam e a popular topic.
M ost p
arents h ave heard about differences betw
een th e tw
o sides of th
e b rain, b
u t they share professionals' co
nfusion about th eir
p ractical im
plicatio ns. ls there a battle going on in
side children's h
eads as these tw o halves fight for con
trol? A re so
m e children
"right-b rain
ed" learners destined to experience failure in a "left brain
ed" curriculum ? C
an a child's "learning style" b e ch
anged? W
h at is a learning style anyw
ay? D
espite w hat you m
ay have heard , tw
o facts are clear. Children are w
hole-brained learners, and th e brain prefers cooperation to
conflict. M oreover, anyone w
ho claim s to h
ave answ ers or "cures"
based on
h em
ispheric research
is undo
ubtedly guilty
of oversim
plification . W
hile the term s "right-" and "left-brained"
m ay provide an interesting m
etaphor, they are neither a scientific fact n
o r an
unch anging asp
ect of brain function . In th
is ch ap
ter I w
ill try to explain w hat is understood scientifically and how
it can sensibly b
e applied to help children link both h em
ispheres into an efficient an
d flex
ible system for learning.
P artn
ers in T
h in
k in
g
If you looked dow n at the top of the h
ead and co uld peer th
ro ugh
the skull, you w ould see that th
e cortex is not one solid m ass, but
it consists of tw o distinct halves-
th e cerebral h
em ispheres. T
hese hardw
orkin g team
m ates contain tw
o sets of co rtical lobes and the associated subcortical structures that w
ork together for all m ental
activity. In a m
ature b rain
, a thick bridge of fibers called the corpus callosum
carries
m essages
in a
constant flow
betw
een the
h em
ispheres. W ith the exception of a few
surgical cases, w hich you
w ill learn about shortly, it isn't possible to be "left-brained" or
"right-brained." E ven after surgery th
e brain fights for norm alcy.
L ikew
ise, a curriculum could not be developed for only one side,
since any
activity au
tom atica
lly engag
es both
o f a
child's hem
ispheres. T h
ere are, h ow
ever, m any individu
al variations in th
e w ay th
e b rain distributes the load, and experien
ce does help "sculpt" their b
alance. C
arl Sagan term ed the corpus callosum
a "path to the future" because he b
elieved th at only dynam
ic cooperation betw een the
hem ispheres can achieve m
ankind's highest objectives.
L U
M P
E R
S A N
D SP
L IT
T E
R S
"C areless" or T
oo C areful?
A s h
e stood to leave m y office, M
r. Jarvis turned to his w ife. "W
ell, w
e h ave our w
ork cut out fo r us, but at least w
e know h
e isn't lazy or stup
id. N ow
that I understand T im
a little better, I'll try to be m
ore pati~~t and app reciate the th
ings he's good at." A
lthough"'th ere is no such thing as a "typical" child, T
im Jarvis
h as a lot in com
m on w
ith m any yo
ungsters w ho strain the p
atience of paren
ts. In fact, tw elve-year-old T
im w
as b affling all the adults
in his life because he w as so goo
d at som e things and
, as he ad
m itted, so poo
r at oth ers. A
star soccer player and vice president of his class, he excelled in art and show
ed a real talent for W eb
design , b
u t h
e w as running into tro
uble w ith m
ath and E nglish
. H e
asto nished his father w
ith his intuitive ability to figure out th e
relatio nship betw
een w ind, w
aves, and th e speed of th
eir sailboat, b
ut he co uldn't rem
em ber the order of the m
ultiplication tables. H
e w as pop
ular w ith h
is teach ers, bu
t his repo rt card reflected their
frustration: "W
ritin g and spellin
g need attention. T im
should take m ore tim
e on sentence strncture."
"T im
seem s to get the ideas in m
ath , bu
t is careless \~th w ritten
w ork. H
e often forgets assign m
ents given in class."
136 o f 330
"T im
can understand stories very w ell, but he m
akes m any
careless errors w hen he reads out loud. I w
ish he w ould participate
m ore in class discussions, as he alw
ays has good ideas." I spent several hours talking to T
im and adm
inistering so m
e tests, on w
hich he scored, overall, som ew
hat above average. T he
extrem ely uneven profile of his abilities, how
ever, suggested a neurological basis for his apparent "carelessness." H
is style of thinking w
as w eighted tow
ard processes usually associated w ith
the right hem isp
h ere-ev
en w
hen he w as perform
ing tasks m ore
appropriately m anaged by the left.
T im
's classm ate, C
arl, on the other hand, w as a w
hiz w ith the
kind of details th at really "bugged" T
im . H
is E nglish com
positions w
ere m eticulously w
ritten , altho
ugh his teacher lam ented that he
should "use
m ore
im agination."
A flaw
less oral
reader, he
som etim
es m issed the po
int of a story even w hen he could recall
all the details. In m ath
, he loved com putation but avoided story
problem s, just as he tried to avoid graphs, charts, an
d m aps. C
arl preferred w
riting linear com puter program
s to athletics, adm itting
that h e h
ad a h ard tim
e getting the "feel" of positions and plays in team
sports. C arl didn't h
ave a lot of problem s in school, but his
parents w o
ndered w hy he w
asn 't very popular.
T h
ese boys' differences reflect the "styles" w ith w
hich their
brains balance
various types
of learning.
For purposes
of illustration
, let's call T im
a "lum per" and C
arl a "splitter." T hese
term s
ch aracterize
the hem
isp heric
m odes
of handling
inform ation.
D ivid
in g B
rain s
Scientists first learn ed about hem
ispheric differences from adult
patients w ho needed surgery to stop epileptic seizures. T
hese sud
den electrical storm s flood th
e b rain w
ith uncon trolled activity;
som etim
es the only w ay to stop them
is by cutting through the corp
us callosum . Such "split-brain" patien
ts, w h
ose hem ispheres
are deprived of a chance to co m
m unicate w
ith each other, have cooperated
in research
to discover
how
each hem
isph ere
fun ctions. B
ecause cortical areas are prim arily connected w
ith sensory organs on th
e opposite (contralateral) side of tl1e bo dy,
scientists are able to "feed" inform ation into one side or the other
depending on w here they present it. T
hese studies have show n that
each hem
isphere has
its ow
n unique
style of
processing inform
ation. F or m
ost people the right hem isphere learns by
getting the w hole intuitive "feel" o
f a situation, w hile the left tends
to analyze system atically and sequentially. T
he right sees outlines and w
holes ("G estalts"), w
hile the left arranges the details in order. T
he right
is a
sim ultaneous
"lum per," the left a
sequential "splitter."
T he left hem
isphere "splitter" is a natural for the analytic, sequential requirem
ents of spoken language. It can deal w ith
rapidly changing sound patterns such as phonics o r w
ords in sentences and fast-m
oving fine-m otor patterns such as w
riting o r
rapid, repeating finger m ovem
ents. W
hile the left hem isphere thinks in w
ords, the right relies m ore
on em otional and sensory im
ages. Its prim ary jobs are im
portant o
n es-m
ain tain
in g
control o f visual space and enabling us to
understand situations. It can form m
ental m aps, organize physical
exploration, m entally "look at" or conceptualize an idea, o
r know
how to rotate suitcases in order to m
ake them all fit into the trunk
of a car. A rtistic talent and ability to "see" others' perspectives also
seem s to spring from
this side of the brain. It has stronger fiber connections to the em
otional centers in the lim bic system
than does the left, and lim
bic em otional centers are also larger on the
right.
H O
W T
H E
H E
M IS
P H
E R
E S
S H
A R
E T
H E
L O
A D
L E
F r: T
H E
" S
P L
IT fE
R "
A nalytic-sequential
P rovides details
R easons logically
A nalyzes, understands tim
e
R IG
H T
: T H
E "
L U
M P
E R
"
W holistic-
sim ultaneous-"hands-on"
Sees w holes
R easons intuitively
D esigns, understands three
dim ensional space
L anguage: speech, letter sounds
L anguage: pitch, gesture,
gram m
ar ' prosody (m
elody), social interaction
R apidly changing m
otor patterns M anipulospatial abilities:
(w riting, repeated finger
changing environm ent w
ith m
ovem ents)
hands L
ikes autom atic routines
V erbal short-term
m em
ory P
rocessing rapidly changing auditory patterns (u
n d
ers~ d
in g
speech) P
utting things in order E
m otion: approach
L ikes novelty
M em
ory for sensory im ages
G en~rating m
ental m aps,
conceptualizing m entally
U nderstanding intuitively
E m
otion: w ithdraw
W hat are the im
plications for children's learning? F irst, both
hem ispheres are im
portant! O ne m
ajor job of childhood is to develop an efficient system
that utilizes a com bination of"lum
per" and "splitter" skills. O
n the follow ing page is a sum
m ary of som
e im
portant strengths and w eaknesses of T
im and C
arl at age tw elve.
C learly these boys illustrate only tw
o of the innum erable w
ays in w
hich learning
abilities are
m ixed
and m
atched in
each individual's brain. N
o such thing exists as a "one-size-fits-all" diagnosis or teaching plan, and even the usual labels can't capture an individual m
ind.
138 of 330
T IM
: A "
L U
M P
E R
"
S T
R E
N G
T H
S
L arge-m
uscle (global) sports (soccer, sw
im m
ing) S
patial relationships (sailing, m
echanical draw ing): scores at
high school level
V isual creativity ( excels at art
and design)
L earning by doing (carpentry,
m echanical gadgets)
D oing puzzles w
ithout sm all
internal details (seeing "w
holes")
G etting along w
ith peers
C A
R L
: A "SP
L IT
T E
R "
W E
A K
N F
.S S
F .S
Sm all, patterned m
otor sequences (w
riting) A
uditory short-term m
em ory
for w ords: scores like an eight
year-old Follow
ing sequential directions, being neat and punctual L
anguage expression, gram
m ar, accurate oral
reading, spelling G
etting m ath equations in
order (analyzing and sequencing) H
earing and rem em
bering hom
ew ork assignm
ents, taking notes in class
S T
R E
N G
T H
S
L inear-sequential
com puter progran1m
ing
W E
A K
N E
S S
F .S
Phonics, gram m
ar, story details
M ath "facts"
A lgebra (form
ulae) P
unctuality A
udito1y m em
ory for w
ords or digits
L arge-m
uscle sports, sense of field positions C
om prehension of "big
picture" (reading com prehension,
relationships) M
ath concepts; unfam iliar story
problem s
G eom
etry, m aps, charts, graphs
Im agination, creativity
Social aw aren
ess, understanding oth
ers' points of view
H ow
do all th ese differences com
e about? A s w
ith alm ost every
aspect of brain developm en
t, each child com es into the w
orld w ith
a special
pattern, but
environm ental
influences affect
its realization.
W E
R E
T H
E Y
B O
R N
T H
IS W
A Y
? In
fan t S
p ecialists
W h
en a baby is born, the brain is w aiting for experience to turn on
th e sw
itches. T he right and left hem
ispheres, although clearly defined,
are n ot yet functionally connected, since the bridge
betw een th
em is one of the last m
em branes to be "finished" w
ith coatings of m
yelin , at age tw
elve or later. T he tw
o h em
ispheres are p
rim ed, even before birth, for different types of w
o rk. S
equential noises, such as a series of clicks, provoke greater brain w
ave activity in new
borns' left hem ispheres, w
hereas visual flashes of light arouse the right side, w
hich also responds to no nverbal
m usical notes or the sound of the w
ashing m ach
ine.
U S
IN G
B O
T II H
E M
IS P
H E
R E
S
Z 1
J 'cjii
~ ~
~ – – ~
3 w
_
~1 f1
( CC:~I
~~-? <':= -~
:–=::=':
Scientists are finding that m aturation seem
s to m ove in w
aves, first tow
ard the right, and th en tow
ard th e left sid
e at around eighteen m
onths w hen language co
m prehension and speech are
actively developin g.
T his righ
t-left altern ation continu
es even
through adolescence and m ay differ betw
een boys and girls. W hile
w e can't yet draw
m uch in the w
ay of im plication
s from th
ese findings, th
ey certainly poin t to a need for adults to be patient and
supportive w hile a youngster's brain takes on new
challenges w ith
new m
ental equipm ent.
O ne w
ay to track h em
ispheric developm ent is by observing the
skills exhibited by the tw o hands, since the right hand usually
reflects left-h em
isphere use an d
vice versa -at least w
ith m ost
right-h anded people. F
or exam ple, one study evaluated w
hether three-, fo
ur-, and five-year-olds w ere b
etter at using their right or left han
ds fo r different kinds of activities. T
he right hand 0eft hem
isphere) w as better at sequential m
otor actions, such as finger tapping or peg m
oving, w h
ereas th e left hand (right hem
isphere) p
referred visual-spatial tasks such as copyin g another person
's hand postures.
Innate differences in the h em
isph eres m
ay also influence our habitu
al em otio
nal "style," or tem p
eram ent. C
hild ren w
ho tend to app
roach new situations m
ore p ositively
-th e m
ore extroverted one
s-show
greater left-hem
isphere activation
, w
hile m
ore w
ithdraw n
children activate
m ore
right-h em
isph ere
circuits. C
hild ren also show
b rain activation differences w
hen stressed ;
right-frontal activators show m
o re distress at m
aternal separation .
T h
ese tendencies have been fo un
d in children as young as seven m
on th
s ~ d ap
pear to be related, at least in part, to th e m
oth er's
em otional state. D
epressed m oth
ers show m
ore righ t fro
ntal brain w
aves, an d so do their infants.
O n
e S id
e In stead
o f T
w o
Several dram atic cases prove that hem
isp heric organizatio
n can b
e altered to som e degree. Im
agine yourself as a parent w ho h
as a terrible decisio
n to m ake: Y
our child has been afflicted since birth by a rare convulsive disorder th
at does not respond to m edication.
N eurologists find that one side of th
e brain is seriously injured, causing continu
al, violent reactio ns th
ro ugh
out the b rain
. T he
rem edy is d
rastic: rem oving the entire hem
isphere th at is th
e so
urce of th e tro
uble. A
n um
b er of child
ren w ho have un
dergone this surgery, called "hem
id ecortication
," have dem onstrated brain plasticity in action
. A
s they grew up
, the child ren have asto
nished do ctors by their
app arent norm
alcy, as the op posite hem
isp here and sub
cortical
141 of 330
structures assum ed m
any o f the duties o
f the m issing hem
isphere. C
hildren w ithout
a left hem isphere developed
language and
learned to read, w hile
right hem idecorticates
could perform
visual-spatial tasks.
L ong-term
studies have show n th
at overall ability is som ew
hat low
er th an
m ight be expected if th
e child's brain had been able to develop norm
ally. T he younger the brain at th
e tim e o
f surgery, the greater its potential for redistributing assignm
ents, but any such com
pensation has its cost. S
om e children are born w
ith agenesis o f th
e corpus callosum ,
lacking p art o
r all of th e fiber bridge, m
uch like th e "split-brain"
patients. T hese yo
un gsters often have problem
s w ith language and
social skills, b ut som
etim es they show
up w ithout debilitating
learning d isabilities. I have talked to m
others w ho discovered th
at their child had this co
nditio n only w
hen the child's brain h ad to be
scanned fo r som
e other reaso n-sh
o w
ing once again how adaptive
th e h
u m
an brain is. M oreover, their language difficulties often
resp ond w
ell to skilled intervention.
T h
in k
in g S
tyles
A s w
e co nsider the im
plications of all this inform ation
, it becom es
clear th at, w
hile no norm al environm
ent w ill m
ak e a child "left-"
or "right-brain ed
," experien
ce does influence how
w e
deploy different types of thinking skills. In chap
ter 9, I w ill describ
e h ow
specific aspects of a child's brain functio
n for reading can b e
sw itch
ed from
one
hem isphere
to the
oth er
b y
p articular
instructio nal techniques, as ju
st one exam ple.
H ere's a sum
m ary of som
e m ajo
r points about the hem ispheres:
1. H
em ispheric
specialization is
p resent
from
birth ,
but develo
pm ent is shaped by input to th
e brain . H
eavy auditory verbal stim
ulatio n m
ay increase left-h em
isph ere capabilities and
vice versa.
D eaf
children, for
exam ple,
sh ow
a
pattern of
h em
isph eric organization th
at is different fro m
th at of h
earing ch
ildren .
In E
ndang ered
M inds,
I suggest
th at
dim inished
language use an d less tim
e for reflection in th e lives of child
ren tod
ay m ay be eroding left-h
em isp
here language areas.
2 . L
atera lization m
eans th e pattern by w
hich abilities such as language are distributed betw
een th e tw
o sides. 3. H
em ispheric dom
inance is one side's tendency to determ in
e the style of processing to b
e used fo r a job. In
our highly verbal society, the side w
ith language in it, usually the left, is m ore often
dom inan
t; b u
t for visual, holistic thinking, the right m ay need to
be th e leader.
E X
E R
C IS
IN G
B O
T H
H E
M IS
P H
E R
F .S
SA M
P L
E A
C T
M T
IES
S P
L IT
T IN
G
Sequ ential: A
nalytic
L U
M P
IN G
Sim ultaneous: V
isual Spatial
Fin e-m
otor activities: cutting out sm all L
arge-m uscle play:
item s, coloring inside lines, detailed
team sports,
neecllew o
rk, finger gam es w
ith gym
nastics, clim bing,
seq uenced m
ovem ents
free play (tag, etc.) .
. 1
bal 1
. F
ree-form draw
ing, L
1stem ng to
anguage, ver ana ogies
. .
pam ting
T alking about events
L ooking at pictures
P utting things in order,
m aking lists
U nderstanding tim
e sequences
M usic: the w
ords
W riting sentences
D escribing objects system
atically
U sing pig L
atin, rhym ing w
o rds
R epeating directio
ns in order
W orking w
ith shapes, block-building, inventing D
oing three dim
ensional puzzles M
usic: the m elody
M anipulating
m echanical devices
D ram
atizing, creative m
ovem ent
F inding hidd
en pictures Seeing or creating patterns
L isting steps in an activity
H E
L P
IN G
T H
E M
W O
R K
T O
G E
T H
E R
E asels, paints,
fingerpaints, clay, craft activities
• G am
es that com bine visual and verbal cues (e.g., S
im on
Says). • V
isualizing pictures
from
listening or reading
(m ake
a "m
ental m ovie").
• L arge block play w
ith a story attached. • D
escribing actions w ith w
ords. • T
alking about m anipulating toys or m
echanical gadgets. • V
erbalizing intuitive discoveries. ("H ow
did you know that?
W hat clues did you use? W
hat cam e into your m
ind first?") • D
escribing problem -solving experiences. ("C
an you tell m e
how you did that puzzle?")
• M em
orizing m ath facts to m
usic. • ~
e llin
g w ords backw
ard, rem em
bering num ber sequences
backw ard.
, K eeping the score of th
e gam e in your head.
• D oing proofs in geom
etry (proving an intu itive process w
ith seq
uential logic). • W
riting up science experim ents.
• C ooking by follow
ing recipes. • W
atching TV and then retelling the st01y in order. ("F
irst they found th
e treasure, an d then … ")
• D oing electrical w
iring from a sequential plan
. • B
uilding m odels from
directions. • R
eading m usic.
• T elling tim
e from a nondigital clock
.
4 . In
divid uals vary in
th eir ability to com
m unicate betw
een hem
ispheres. Such flexibility m ay be a m
ajor factor in intellectual ab
ility as w ell as in differences betw
een m ale and fem
ale brains.
143 o f 330
5. H
em ispheric
style is
a term
suggesting
an individu
al's preferred w
ay o f processing inform
ation . F
or exam ple, in putting
a puzzle together, you can use a p redom
in antly analytic strategy
by nam ing each piece and assem
bling th em
in a logical order, or you can w
ork from the w
hole outline, using m ainly visual clues.
A lthough both hem
ispheres are w orking, one m
ay set the tone. 6. Y
ounger children m ay tend to use a right-hem
isphere style, acting on situations globally w
ithout analyzing them ; as verbal
dem ands increase, the left side takes over m
ore often. A n activity
such as reading m ay be handled in different w
ays at different ages. 7. H
orm ones, particularly sex horm
ones such as testosterone and
estrogen, influence
hem isphericity.
T hey
appear to
be pow
erful factors
before birth an d
again at adolescence.
O n
e unproven
hypothesis suggests
th at
the reason
som e
early developing teenage girls fall
behind in m ath is that estrogen
suppresses developm ent of right hem
isphere visual-spatial skills.
A ge G
u id
elin es
T he hem
ispheres com m
unicate byw ay o
f the corpus callosum , the
thickest netw ork o
f connections in the entire body. It holds on e
key to m ental efficiency by activating and suppressing hem
ispheric control. F
or exam ple, in reading, areas in both sides are used, but
if the langu age centers o
f the left hem isphere aren't dom
inant, accuracy, fluen
cy, and com prehension m
ay suffer. P
arents w ho w
ant to help their children build this pathw ay to the
future can follow three m
ajor guidelines:
1. E
ncourage a w ide variety of activities to engage all parts of the
brain .
2 . L
et the child's interest direct learning . C
onnections develop in resp
onse to dem an
ds from the child's brain, not from
an adult's.
3. D
on 't expect full hem
ispheric integration until after puberty.
H ere are suggestions for each age level:
B irth
to th ree years: T
he baby and toddler m ay still be usin
g
prim itive brain areas for m
any tasks that the cortex has not yet taken over. D
uring this period th e child essentially has a "split
brain," because the co rpus callosum
is im m
ature. Y ou m
ay have noticed a young child transfer a crayon from
one hand to the other w
hen crossing the center of the paper. T his inability to cross th
e body's m
idline is a sign that the h em
ispheres are still w orking
ind ependently. W
e can't expect a child of this age to put com plex
things together-
either physically
or m
entally. S
he can't
effo rtlessly coordinate tw
o sides of the body or link w ords and
im ages for reasoning. S
he can't picture the characters in a story in her m
ind, rem em
ber com plicated directions, understand her ow
n reaso
nin g process, or solve problem
s that she m ust "see" in h
er head. ("Sally w
alks behind Suzie. W ho w
alks first?") T hese years
are im portant foundations for expanded use of both hem
ispheres (see "E
xercising B oth H
em ispheres").
F ou
r to six years: D id you ever w
onder w hy so m
any people have trouble rem
em bering m
uch from their lives before age four? A
t around
that tim
e the
corpus callosum
undergoes
m ajor
developm ent, so children can becom
e m uch m
ore aw are of w
hat is happening and even begin to reflect on som
e of their ow n
learning. T hus they begin to form
conscious m em
ories- a talent
that w ill
expand through the school years. Y ou
can observe
increases in connectivity w hen children instinctively start to talk
to them selves w
hile doing puzzles or planning the use of art m
aterials, and they m ake progress in
activities, like riding a
tricycle, that involve coordinating tw o sides of the body. B
y age six, m
ental activities
com bining right-
and left-hem isphere skills
becom e even m
ore im portant for schoolw
ork. R eal-life challenges
build connections- especially w
hen the child has a real reason to solve them
. T ying shoes, for exam
ple, com bines tw
o hands using sequential
m otor
m ovem
ents in
a visual-spatial
task, and
handw riting requires m
otor sequences as w ell as a global concept
of w here you are on the paper and w
h ere the spaces should be
betw een w
ords. W
ise parents use these years to link language w ith creativity and
hands-o n m
anipulative skills, w hich build bridges to
abstract reasoning. T
h ey pass up rote-level m
em o
rization tasks designed to m
ake the child (or th e parent) look im
pressive.
A nursery school teacher told m
e one story about a m other w
ho w
as anxious to m ake her little girl appear intelligent by teaching
her som e im
portant facts. W hen th
e teacher reported that Susie had succeeded in tying her shoes for the first tim
e, M other brushed
off the new s.
"T ell us w
hose picture is on th e one-dollar bill, Susie," she
dem anded.
A greeably, the child replied, "W
ashington R edskins!"
T o
build h em
ispheric bridges, stick w ith things
that have m
eaning for th e child.
S ix to
ten years: H
em ispheric allocation oflabor m
ay be affected by
school dem
ands for
reading, w
riting, spelling,
and com
putation. C hildren w
ho tend to b e "Jum
pers" often experience difficulty and begin to think they are "stupid" because their individual style seem
s out of place. T hey require extra practice w
ith lang
uage (seasoned w ith recognition of their visual or creative
talents) and specialized help w ith the skills of reading
, personal o
r~ nization, and solving m
ath equations. C onversely, "splitters"
adept in linear detail (soundin g out w
ords, com putatio
n) m ay risk
becom ing one-dim
ensional if th eir school fails
to em phasize
com prehension and original thinking. V
isual·spatial skills, like verbal skills, are very responsive to environm
ental stim ulation.
B ecause th
ey und erlie m
any types of conceptual reasoning , they're
w orth w
orking on. W ise parents try to, understand th
eir child's preferred
style and
provide supplem
entary experiences
for balance, especially enco
uragem ent of creativity and the arts. G
o together to m
useum s, children's concerts, plays; try sculpture,
creative m ovem
ent, or dram a. If these activities are not your
favorites, give th em
a try anyhow . Y
ou are a w onderful exam
ple of "parent as learner," and you m
ay even build a few bridges of your
ow n!
E leven
years an d
up: T his is th
e age for the final m aturation of
the "path to th e future." B
y now your child has a distinct learning
style, w hich adult expectation
s should take into account. C hildren
w ho still "m
arch to a different drum m
er" probably have strong creative talents. H
elp each child respect h is ow
n style, but don't
146 of 330
give up on m aking connections. F
or m any children this is a tim
e w
hen new m
yelin and synapse grow th or changing horm
one balances eventually help things fit
together, if the em otional
clim ate perm
its. L et the yo
ungster know that his brain is gaining
w onderful new
p o
w ers-it's w
orth the effort to try again on som e
old problem areas. V
isualizing stories or"seeing" and turning ideas around m
entally should becom e easier, but som
e young teens, especially girls, m
ay need verbal strategies for talking through m
aps, geom etric problem
s, o r com
plex visual displays. S om
e types of visual-spatial skills can be im
proved by appropriate com puter
activities th at require m
ental m anipulation of objects on the
screen. D
uring thls period of rapid change, parents take on m ore of a
spectator role. D on't forget to applaud! In addition, keep providing
supplem entary cultural experiences and lots of conversation ab
out thoughts and ideas.
C on
stru ction
D elays
In a recen t parent conference, the father, a neurologist, w
as sym
pathizing w ith his seco
nd grade son 's spelling difficulties.
"I realize now ," he explained, "that I am
still hopelessly confused about all the w
ords I learned before I w as in sixth grade. T
hen, suddenly, spelling just cam
e together." F
ortunately, he hadn 't already been pressured into believing he
w as a failure. If your child has trouble m
aking connections of any kind, I w
ould suggest that yo u focus hard on keeping the road open
w ith em
otional support and good teaching w hile the bridges have
a ch ance to develop
.
B U
IL D
IN G
B
R ID
G E
S
B E
'IW E
E N
T
H E
H
E M
IS P
H E
R E
S :
PR A
C T
IC A
L T
IP S
• U sing tw
o parts of th e brain at the sam
e tim e develops w
ith age and practice. T
he farther apart tw o areas are, the easier
it is to use them
together.
(It is easier to carry on a conversation w
hile draw ing a picture th
an w
hile w riting a
letter.) • A
positive
em otional
state im
proves con
n ectivity
for m
essages crossing
betw een
hem ispheres,
w hile
excess pressure o
r anxiety m ay interfere.
• F ood allergies m
ay slow dow
n transfer tim e across th
e corpus callosu
m . S
ince traditional skin tests are n o
t alw ays a reliable
detector o f food sensitivities, you should keep track o
f any substances that seem
to m ake your child tired
, grouchy, listless, less m
entally alert, o r "hyper."
• W hen
transfer tim e is im
paired, th e m
ost com
plicated thinking goes first.
• S om
e parents inadvertently give different signals to each hem
isphere. If your w ords say "T
hat's okay" b u
t you r body
signals are
negative, your
child's brain
w ill
b e
understandably confused. • Y
our ow n hem
ispheric style influences th e activities you
choose for your child. B e aw
are o f it and don
't lim it varieties
o f adventure. If you hate puzzles o
r w ord gam
es, for exam ple,
let your child know th
at you are approaching a challenge together.
• H elp your child learn to estim
ate in m ath
. S eeing th
e big picture before starting gives a fram
ew ork for understanding.
Y oung children find this very hard.
• V isualization-also hard for young children-
is im portant
for learning an d
m em
ory. A t first, read stories o
u t loud w
hile you show
pictures; tl1en have child ren draw
pictures o f their
ow n. E
ventually, suggest th at they close their eyes and m
ake a "m
ental m ovie" w
hile you read a sho rt passage. A
sk, "W hat
color w as tl1e queen's dress in your im
agination? W hat did
th e house look like?" D
on't b e surprised if it takes a lo
t o f
practice. Y ou can start gently around age four. A
udfotaped stories are useful an
d fun.
N o
t E n
ou gh
B rid
ges?
R ecently I received a c1y for help from
a prekindergarten teacher. C
harles, sh e reported, "is very bright and has w
onderful language com
prehension b u
t is m iserable in school. H
e is exceptionally aw
kw ard w
ith crayons and scissors, frustrated because h e can't
w rite his nam
e, and h e resists clay and fingerpaints because they
are 'm essy.' H
e is socially inept, can't seem to im
agine or pretend, and alw
ays w aits for a teacher to tell him
how to use new
m aterials.
H e is so clum
sy in gym class that the other children are starting to
m ake fun of him
. I found him crying in the hall yesterday."
A fter observing C
harles in th e classroom
, I understood the teacher's concern
. T he only joy this handsom
e little boy show ed
w as w
h en his turn cam
e at the com puter. H
e kept to h im
self i:;sdespite the teachers' tactful efforts to get him
involved. W
hen w e voiced our concerns to his m
other, she w as surprised
. S
he recognized th at C
harles w as verbally advanced and w
as proud o
f the fact that h e spen
t a lot of tim e at hom
e playing w ith
educational com puter alphabet and num
ber gam es. H
e disliked puzzles, how
ever, and they didn't have an easel, paints, crayons, clay, o
r fingerpaints in the h ouse. C
harles loved books and stories, b
u t he had never liked pretend play and had little contact w
ith other ch
ildren. Since they lived in an apartm ent, he got outside
o nly for supervised w
alks to the park. H is parents thought they had
provided their son w ith the latest and best tools for learning. W
hat h
appened? A
child's basic learning profile is innate, but C harles's p
arents h
ad unw ittingly created an environm
ent that augm ented som
e of his potential problem
s. H is fam
ily didn't realize how im
portant feeling
, touching,
m anipulating,
seeing, hearing,
expressing, im
agining, socializing, and th ree-dim
ension al reasoning are as
forerunners to learn ing. T
he difficulty w as com
plicated by th e fact
that C harles didn
't seek out these activities for h im
self. H e lived in
1 4
8 o
f 330
an environm ent enriched in one sense but deprived in others.
W hen C
harles got to preschool age, h
e qualified for a diagnosis o f
m ild developm
ental disorder. It is h
ard to w
rite a prescription for m ud pie m
aking and tree clim
bing, especially for a child w ho tends to
avoid them . F
or C
harles, w e settled for
an occupational therapist w ho began
sensory integration therapy an d
urged the parents to lim it his
obsessive use o f th
e com puter. W
e encouraged them to slow
ly initiate activities to
b alance his skill developm
ent: finger gam es,
painting, sew ing cards, bead stringing, large m
oto r gam
es such as rolling and kicking a ball, tactile and m
ovem ent activities-and
som e free play outdoors. Since C
harles also needed a lot o f help in
m aking connections w
ith other children, a teacher w orked w
ith him
o n
social interaction skills, and his parents w ere encouraged
to invite classm
ates for sho rt, w
ell-structured play dates. C
harles w ill alw
ays h ave his ow
n set of abilities and quirks, but th
e least w e can do, w
hile his b rain is still able to learn new
things so easily, is to give him
the fullest possible shot at a com plete
adjustm en
t to school, oilier people, and life.
T H
E Q
U F
S T
IO N
O F
H A
N D
E D
N E
S S
W
h o
se R esp
on sib
ility?
O ne interesting question related to hem
ispheric interaction is th at
of right-, left-, o r m
ixed (am bidextrous) handedness. H
andedness is in part genetically determ
ined. A pproxim
ately 9 0
percent of all people are right-handed, but up to 3
0 percent m
ay carry genes for left-handedness. T
o determ ine handedness, several tests sho
uld be used
: for exam ple, eating w
ith a spoon, w riting, throw
ing, ham
m ering, and th
readin g a needle. If a child does any of th
ese w
ith ilie left h and
, h e is classified as "not right-h
anded" or"m ixed
." S
ince each
h an
d
is connected
to the
opposite cereb
ral h
em isphere, it w
as once assum ed iliat a right-hander inevitably
has left-hem isphere lang
uage lateralization, and vice versa. W hile
it is true tlrnt alm ost all right-handers have speech housed in the
left h em
isphere, so do 6 0
to 70 percent of nonright-handers. So m
e nonright-handers have speech in ilie right hem
isphere, and som e
in both sides. H
andedness does not tell us anyiliing definite abou t a person
's
learning style, although it can offer clues. M any left or m
ixed handers
end up
in professions
th at require
visual, holistic, nonverbal, and creative thinking-
b u
t so do som e right-handers.
W e do have som
e evidence that nonright-banders' brains are different.
T hey
m ay h
ave language
m ore
evenly distributed
betw een the tw
o hem ispheres, giving them
a "reserve" in case of
dam age to either side. L
efties w ith left-handed relatives m
ay have different patterns of brain organization th
an those w
ithout. S om
e believe that nonfam
ilial left-handers w ere m
eant to b
e right handed b
u t suffered som
e subtle early dam age th
at changed things around
. H
anded ness
can also
b e
influenced by
less dram
atic environm
ental factors. R ecent studies have show
n th at even the
w ay a prim
ate fetus is carried in the w om
b, o r w
hich side the m
other cradles the infant on, m ay affect handedness. In
hum ans,
this finding m ight also apply to
a m other's habitually handing h
er infant a spoon in one hand or the other. In
turn, an infant's handedness
seem s
to influence
th e hem
ispheres' fu n
~ o
n a
l specialization, o
r the w ay they apportion different tasks. M
ost new
borns show right-sided preferences by lying o
n their backs
facing right v,'ith their right arm s outstretched, and m
ost infants use their right hand m
ore than th e left by age nine m
onths. A bout
half of infants have established a dom inant h
an d
for m ost things
by th e end of the first year; those that do are m
ore skilled in m
anipulating objects. M ost children have clear hand preference
by age four, but som etim
es as late as age seven.
T h
e H an
d an
d th
e B rain
R esearch in anthropology and neurology have converged on the
im portance of hand and tool use as prom
oting higher form s of
hum an intelligence. W
ith grow ing num
bers of "m ouse pushers,"
sedentary view ers,
and children w
ith learning and behavior
problem s,
renew ed
interest is being
focused on the critical
interaction betw een m
otor patterning (coordinated use of the body) and developm
ent of cognitive skills. Lifestyles that lim it
either a child's m anual play or her tw
o-sided body coo rdination
m ay have longer-range effects than anyone has im
agin ed
. Read F rank W
ilson's interesting book T he H
and to learn m
ore about how
tool
use has
influenced the
developm ent
of hum
an intelligence.
" E
xcep tion
al" B
rain s
A n
unusually high percentage ofnonright-handers is found am ong
children w ho have developm
ental disabilities, including reading problem
s- and also am
ong the ranks of unusually gifted m ath
students, chess players, and m usicians. Individuals and fam
ilies w
ho have reading problem s often excel in right-hem
isphere skills: visual-spatial abilities or creative fields (e.g., engineers, artists, architects, surgeons, carpen
ters, interior designers). A fter eight
dyslexic adults w ho had lifelong reading and spelling problem
s donated their brains for postm
ortem study at H
arvard M edical
School, scientists discovered that their left-hem isphere language
areas had
som e
unusual cell
form ations,
and that
right hem
isphere areas w ere b
igger than they are in m ost people. W
hy these tendencies seem
to occur in certain fam ilies is being looked
at very carefully. W e do know
that people w ho have atypical
lateralization often prove to be extrem ely talen
ted if they can get by the verbal/analytical priorities of ou
r education system !
S h
ou ld
W e C
h an
ge H an
d ed
n ess?
Som e parents feel they should insist a child use the righ
t hand, b u
t forcing the issue m
ay create a new set of problem
s. Such pressure has also been suspected of causing stuttering by confusing innate b
rain organization or, m ore likely, by creating em
otional conflict. G
iven curren t inform
ation , the best advice seem
s to be to let you r
child be the guide about w hich w
ill be the p refen
ed hand. I once knew
a four-year-old girl w hose father, a physician,
insisted she use her righ t hand instead of her preferred left because
he though t he could force her left hem
isphere to beco m
e dom inant.
H e w
as convinced that this sw itch w
ould counteract a fam ily
tendency tow ard reading problem
s. W hen he asked m
y opinion, I rem
inded h im
that even top neurologists are hesitant about tam
pering w ith the developing brain. M
ore im portant, th
e child w
as clearly a nervous w reck. U
ndeterred, he persisted, and I lost
151 of 330
track of the case until tw o years later w
hen a tutor called m e. She
had been hired to w ork w
ith the little girl, w ho had just been
diagnosed as
having a
learning disability-accom
panied by
em otional problem
s. W ould she have had it anyw
ay? I don 't know
.
H A
N D
E D
N E
S S
IN A
N U
I'S H
E L
L
, W e do not yet know
enough to fool around w
ith child ren's
developm en
t in any w ay that violates com
m on sense.
, If m em
bers of you r fam
ily are nonright-h anded, you m
ay transm
it the tendency even if you are right-handed. • If your ch
ild is not righ t-handed, it does not m
ean that he w ill
autom atically be either reading disabled or a visual-spatial
genius, but be m ay have a better statistical chance for both
. , A
m bidexterity
m ay
suggest incom
plete language
lateralization, putting a child m ore at risk fo
r delay in language or reading. If your child does not have a hand p
reference by
age five,
show s
signs of language
delay described
in chapter
-, and has
difficulty w ith
sch ool
readiness, you m ight consider a professional evaluation.
Please try to shield the child from your anxiety, how
ever. Y ou
don't w ant to crea
te a "problem "!
• A t
this tim
e there
is no
solid evidence
that "m
ixed dom
inance" of hand, foot,
or eye is
of any diagnostic im
portance.
"T H
E O
T H
E R
D IF
F E
R E
N C
E " B
E T
IV E
E N
B O
Y S A
N D
G IR
IB
A lik
e b u
t D ifferen
t
A fter a recent parents' m
eeting, one m other asked a question that
w as obviously troubling her. "I don't know
w hat to do about m
y five-year-old tw ins," she
confessed. 'T
m doing m
y best to raise them in a 'nonsexist'
environm ent, but Shauna spends a lot of tim
e playing 'house' w ith
her friends, and B uddy only w
ants to build things and run around the neighborhood. N
o m atter how
m uch I encourage them
tow ard
other activities, they seem to be stereotyping them
selves!" T
he topic o f gen
der differences has been hotly debated in
professional circles. F irst o
f all, there are m any m
ore differences am
ong children o f the sam
e sex than betw een th
e sexes. If w e lined
up all
boys an
d
then all
girls on
the basis o f alm
ost any characteristic, there w
ould b e lots m
ore overlap th
an difference
attributable only to gender. N
evertheless, tw o im
portant strands of research are confirm
ing w hat parents have know
n all along: O
verall, boys and girls p refer different activities an
d excel at
different skills. T hey m
ay even think differently. M uch o
f this variation is clearly due to environm
ental factors, b u
t som e o
f it reflects biological variation in brain organization.
F em
ales score better on tests o f som
e verbal skills. F em
ale infants are m
ore sensitive to voices, particularly their m
other's, respond m
ore readily to face-to-face contact, an d
are m ore easily
startled b y
loud noises. T he m
ajority o f girls talk earlier th
an boys.
T hey score better on tests o
f verbal abilities th ro
u ~
o u
t the elem
en tary years, tending to
m aster reading an
d w
riting sooner and to excel in gram
m ar an
d spelling. T
hey are m ore verbally
fluent an d
do better on tests o f nam
ing objects quickly. F em
ales, overall, rely m
ore on talking and have few er language disorders
an d
better hearing throughout life. G enerally th
ey are superior to
m ales
in fine
m otor
coordination, such
as placing
pegs in
pegboards o r using a pencil, and in perceptual speed at m
atching item
s. T hey surpass m
ales in m athem
atical calculation an d
in tests o
f "ideational fluency," such as quickly thinking o f things th
at are a certain color. Socially they are m
ore sensitive to others' facial expressions; girls (but not boys) recognize photographs o
f their m
oth er as early as four m
onths. T hey ten
d to prefer one-on-one
play w ith a friend, w
hile boys tend to play m
ore in groups. G irls
pick up "clues" from the environm
en t m
ore sub tly; this ability for
inciden tal learning m
ay acco unt for th
e phenom enon of"w
om an's
intuition." M
ales o n
the other hand excel overall in tests of visual-spatial skills such as m
oving th ree-d
im ensional objects aro
und in their m
inds, finding
shapes hidden
in a
picture, un
derstanding relationships in th
e physical w orld
, and in throw ing things at a
target o r catching projectiles. S
tudies in different cultu res have
show n th
at th ey are better at solving m
azes- a task th
at m any
w om
en find irritating. B oys consistently do better in m
athem atical
reasoning; in one study they outpaced girls at age thirteen in th e
"highly gifted" m ath category by thirteen to
one. B y tenth grade
the m ajority o
f boys of norm al intelligence have passed m
ost girls up in m
ath. T his differential could be related to their tendency to
solve problem
s by touching and lookin g instead o
f "talking" them
through, since higher m ath requires a type o
f abstract reasoning based o
n relationships in tl1e physical w
orld. M
any boys sh ine at activities requiring large body m
ovem ent an
d
show m
ore aggressive behavior. T hey are less dependent on others'
reactions for their ow n judgm
ents, being m ore influenced by the
objective characteristics of a situation. B
efore w e conclude that these differences are all rooted in
biology, how ever, it is im
portant to rem em
ber som e im
portant facts: M
any children of both sexes don't fit the pattern, and it has often been show
n that adults tend to treat boys an
d girls differently
– even w
hen they think they do not. B oth parents and teachers
tend to e>.'Pect m ore of boys in problem
-solving, and som e teachers
inadvertently give boys m ore feedback and call on tl1em
m ore often
than they do on girls. M
oreover, TV ,
ads, and video gam es
continually reinforce gender stereotypes, as do toys advertised to children and products directed at teens. Perhaps as a result, peer pressure starts very early for gender-role confo
rm ity. N
o one can m
easure how these subtle pressures have contributed
to the differences betw
een the sexes that show up on school tests.
S ex
an d
th e H
em isp
h eres
M ost scientists now
agree th at
there are genuine differences betw
een the average fem ale and m
ale b rain. W
hen your daughter is learn
ing how to w
alk to school, she is m ore likely to find her w
ay by observing landm
arks; you r son m
ay be m ore inclined to m
ap out the route in his m
ind . T
he sam e gender differences are also
found in rats- unless an experim
en t has altered the balance o
f their sex horm
ones d uring a critical period o
f brain developm ent,
in w hich case fem
ales can be m ade to behave m
ore like m ales and
vice versa. S patial abilities m
ay be affected by "m asculinizing"
153 of 330
horm ones, and horm
one balances m ay be influenced by either
genetic o r environm
ental factors. O ne hypothesis bolds that stress
in the pregnant m other m
ay tend to m asculinize the fetal b
rain, w
hich m ight cause an increase in such m
ale-linked characteristics as visual-spatial skills and assertiveness in a girl.
M any girls
(and som
e boys)
h ave
earlier left-hem
isphere language lateralization, but overall abilities are m
ore w idely
distributed. A sectio
n in the back o
f the corpus callosum called the
splenium
is thicker in fem
ales, enabling
them
to use both
hem ispheres in
terchangeably, w hich m
ay account for their skill at picking up nuances o
f a situation o r doing several things at once.
H ow
m any husbands w
onder how their w
ives can talk on the phone, cook din
n er, and discipline the children all at the sam
e tim
e? Som e m
ales, on the other hand, seem to have stronger
con nections betw
een the front and the back parts of the brain, perhaps accounting for a greater interest in the sensory properties o
f objects rather than the nuances of hum an relationships.
B oys
(and som e girls)
m ay also have m
ore assertive right hem
ispheres, particularly w hen they are young. T
heir interest in large-m
otor and visual-spatial play activities (clim bing, building,
m anipulating)
precedes later
m aturation
of left-hem
isphere language centers-
and puts m any little boys at a disadvantage in
school, aliliough this early object play m ay m
ake them better at
m ath later on. B
y tile tim e language is fully lateralized, it is shoved
firm ly
into the
m ale
left hem
isphere; consequently,
w hen
inform ation com
es in, m ore o
f an either- o
r choice of strategies m
ust be m ade. B
oys m ay m
iss inform ation because they are
concentrating on another kind of input. Y et iliey score higher in
tests o f abstract tl1inking because they are not as dependen
t on outside cues.
W h
at C an P
aren ts D
o?
W e are only beginning to understand the influence of gender and
learning style differences in our society. P erhaps you w
onder, ''W
hat's w rong w
itl1 differences, anyw ay?" C
learly, they m ake us
m ore interesting, bu
t if a child is going to be penalized at any stage in the learning process because of lagging developm
ent, parents
w ill w
an t to
take som e action.
• C ertain individual differences seem
to com
e w ith the package.
E ach child's basic pattern o
f brain organization is valuable. P arents
are often the m ain cheering section for one w
hose pattern is slightly divergent from
school expectations. I think the term
"nontraditional learner" is a helpful one for describing such youngsters, w
hether m ale o
r fem ale.
• S
tudies show
that
parents unconsciously
increase reinforcem
ent o f traditional gender-linked play and social roles
w hen children are about one year old, a tim
e w hen th
e brain is very m
alleable. • Y
oung boys (and som e girls) suffer needlessly in early school
years if th ey lack verbal and fine m
otor skills. L ikew
ise, you r
daughter (o r son) m
ay bog dow n in m
athem atical and som
e types o
f abstract reasoning if she lacks visual-spatial ability. W e don't
know how
m uch you can shape these abilities, b
u t it ~
akes sense to plan activities w
ith an eye to balance. C onsult th
e suggestions listed under "E
xpanding L earning for B
oys an d
G irls."
• E ncourage your school to appreciate each child's talents. W
hen I go into an elem
entary classroom and see th
at all th e spelling
papers w ith sm
iley faces have girls' nam es on them
, I understand w
hy boys som etim
es grow up resenting th
e fem ale o
f th e species.
• Y ou and the school m
ay be orchestrating gender differences by projecting subtle attitudes that you are not aw
are o f.
• B oys' later-bloom
ing verbal abilities p u
t th em
m ore at risk for
early learning problem s. If your son has a late birthday, consider
his learning pattern carefully before you enter him in school. A
professional evaluation m
ay be helpful.
E X
P A
N D
IN G
L E
A R
N IN
G F
O R
B O
Y S
A N
D G
IR L
S
A ttitu
d es
• B e aw
are o f subtle pressures you exert. P
arental m odels m
ay be one o
f the m ost im
portant factors in creating sex differences. M om
telling h
er daughter "It's okay. I w as terrible in m
ath , too" is clearly
a no-no, b u
t m ore subtle m
essages are also pow erful.
, F athers seem
m ore likely to perpetuate sex stereotypes w
ith
children th an
do m others.
• B oys m
ay be placed "at risk" for educational problem s by a lack
o f responsiveness in their m
others; girls are m ore "at risk" if they
lack exposure to challenges.
• P raise girls for achievem
ents just as you w ould praise boys.
D on't
low er your expectations for ei ther sex o
n th
e basis o f
anticipated differences. • D
on't assum e th
at girls w on't take to blocks and other building
toys, engineering, o r m
ath, o r that boys w
on't b e interested in
reading or cooking. Y our assum
ptions m ay becom
e self-fulfilling prophecies.
• B e alert to you
r child's "style" o f responding an
d its influence
on your interactions. F or exam
ple, a child w ho is very context
sensitive w ill sense you
r m oods and say things to m
ake you feel positive tow
ard him , a nd vice versa. Y
ou m ay need to
h elp som
e boys be m
ore sensitive in their personal relationships. S how
them
how to respond. ("It really m
ade m e feel uncom
fortable w hen you
didn't say anything after I told you about m y new
project. If you m
ade a com m
ent, I w ould know
you w ere interested.")
• B e sym
pathetic to som e inevitable b
u t unfair pressures in
school. W hereas expectations in prim
ary schools are som etim
es m
ore appropriate for little girls, som e college e n
trance exam s m
ay favo
r m ales.
• H elp all children learn to rely on their ow
n judgm ent. G
irls in science class tend to look to adults o
r peers, w hile boys are better
at ju dging their ow
n w ork.
• D
on 't
provide too m
uch · assistance
as children
confront unfam
iliar equipm
ent o r activities. T
hey w ill
gain skill
and confidence if you stay in the background as a support rather than a director.
A ctivities
• P rovide all children w
ith varied toys and experiences. • P
roviding variety in toys and activities isn't enough . Y
ou m ay
have to sit dow n and p
la y together. Show
your child how to play
in a variety of w ays, avoiding sex stereotypes. M
other m ay b
e surprised how
m u
ch fun sh e can have w
ith an electric train o r a set
156 o f 330
o f blocks; D
ad can read to his so
n in
addition to playing baseball w
ith him . B
oys can enjoy needlew ork an
d girls love carpentry.
• E
ncourage children
to use
m echanical
an d
scientific
equipm ent: telescopes,
m icroscopes, cam
eras, radio kits,
and science kits. L
et them take things apart. S
om e children need to ta
lk their w
ay through, w hile others should also b
e encouraged to use w
ords describing w hat they are doing an
d seeing.
• Y ou m
ay need to help som
e children broaden their contexts and help others focus theirs. B
roadening m eans calling attention to
elem ents in a situation th
at they have m issed. ("-I/bile you w
ere kicking th
e ball, did you notice th at D
ad w as having a conversation
w ith
your school
bus driver?")
F ocusing
calls for
specific suggestions. ("W
hile you're w atching that T
V program
for social studies, w
hy not save your talk w ith S
ue until later?") • S
om e children m
ay need help relating ideas to their ow
n experiences ("W
hen the characters in the story couldn 't achieve
their am bition
, did it rem ind you o
f the tim e you didn't m
ake the first team
?"), w hereas others m
ay profit from a push tow
ard m ore
abstract, less personal thinking. ("Y ou noticed that it is harder to
squeeze the icing o
u t o
f the narrow er tube; can you figure out a
rule ab o u
t how force and the size o
f a tube are related?") • R
em em
ber that m any ch
ild ren
-ev en
into their teen y ears
m ust m
anipulate the environm ent in order to learn; they don
't get inform
ation w ell by only listening.
• Y ou can h
elp both sexes develop lagging spatial skills by play that involves m
anipulating and exploring three-dim ensional space
and objects. • M
ore verbal children m
ay need to talk through problem s in
m ath,
chem istry,
and physics.
O tl1ers
profit fro
m
diagram s,
pictures, and dem onstrations.
• H ands-on com
puter program s, such as L
E G
O /L
ogo, offer interesting possibilities for com
bining analytic and spatial skills. • A
ppropriate com
puter gam
es (e.g.,
T etris)
th at
prom ote
m anipulation o
f spatial concepts can im prove these abilities in
children for w hom
tl1ey are w eak
. Players already adept in these areas do not seem
to gain m uch in skill level through extra practice.
S E
E IN
G T
H E
F O
R E
S T
O R
T H
E T
R E
E S
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B A
C K
T O
T H
E L
U M
P E
R S
A N
D S
P L
IT IE
R S
S
trateg ies fo
r L earn
in g
L et's
return to
specific recom m
endations for T
im
an d
C arl.
A lthough
there are as m
any styles of learning
~ there are
individuals, flexibility in
presenting m
aterial can help
m ost
children understand and rem em
ber m ore easily. T
he idea is to capitalize on the child's natural "style" w
hile boosting w eak areas
w ith extra help
. C
arl, our splitter, is big on facts, details, and "right" answ ers.
M ore
interested in
inform ation
than in
people, he
is an
industrious, w ell-organized stud
ent. D epending on the school h
e attends, his lack of creativity and insight m
ay be a problem , but
youngsters like C arl generally do w
ell in traditional classroom s.
T hey thrive w
ith a lecture m ethod of instructio
n, m em
orization, and objective, short-answ
er tests. T heir w
eaknesses show up w
hen they m
ust stand back and view the w
hole forest instead
of concentrating on the individual trees. O
ften a child like this becom
es m entally lost unless som
eone rem inds him
w here h
e is supposed to be going.
A V
isu al O
u tlin
e
~-r5 ,, …. _
::§
_____,{' l
, G
~
(::!_") _
,,
f_ L
( ~
·;–· … I ,'f:V
~~-D
C arl had a habit of getting caught up w
ith details and m issing the
m ain point of class discussions. I gave him
a draw ing of th
e forest and the trees and suggested his teacher take him
aside w hen he
started to get enm eshed in splitting and ask, "C
arl, can you stand back and look for the forest, or are you bum
ping into the trees?" O
ne day h e looked up in pure frustration and said, "I haven't even
gotten to the trees. I'm stuck in the bushes!"
C arl benefited from
being encouraged to look for the big picture before h
e started anything. W e tried to help him
see connections and und
erstand how details fit together to m
ake w holes. O
ne tactic that helped him
pull ideas together w as sum
m arizing a paragraph
or a story in only ten w ords o
r one sentence. H e learned to think
about his m ain idea before h
e tried to m ake a point in a discussion.
H is teachers tried to provide C
arl w ith a fram
ew ork before he
started to plug
in isolated facts.
T hey discovered
that m ost
students like a verbal outline and a blackboard diagram of the
general ideas to be covered at the beginning of a lesson. ("T oday
w e're going to talk about the causes of the A
m erican R
evolution. Y
ou w ill need to think about w
hat w e have learned about life in the
colonies before you
can understand them
.") T hey also
used tim
elines and other devices to put facts into perspective.
""•-,=·- rg;1?~ …. , J
~ . e.~;z.~
J ~
~t ~
R ~
~ ~
,,y &! ~~-~),' ~
~13,i:
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f-¥£;:–J '_b) .
.·
f f ~
D raw
ing diagram s, or "m
ind m aps," ofideas is a w
ay to put verbal m
aterial into visual form ;
it seem s to help both Jum
pers and splitters. It is initially hard for m
any people, but since using this technique w
ith students, I am a convert. T
hey don 't care how
in ept
I am ; th
ey love th e w
ay it helps th em
"see" the m ain points. O
ther teachers and I im
provised th e ones in this chap
ter. T ry it w
ith yo ur
child , rem
em bering th
at there is no "right" w ay, as long as it
expands und erstanding
.
158 o f 330
T h
e P aren
ts' R ole
C hildren display learning style differences as early as
nursery school, b
u t not all teachers know
about th e im
portance of varying teaching techniques to accom
m odate them
. P arents m
ay have to help the school understand a youngster's individual needs and take the initiative at hom
e in suggesting new w
ays of studying. T ry
different approaches to see w hat w
orks best. T he techniques
suggested in this chapter can be adapted to alm ost any age level.
P arents often rem
ark th at because their learning patterns are
sim ilar to those of their children, they have strategies o
f th eir ow
n to share.
W eird
b u
t W on
d erfu
l
T hen there's T
im . A
nontraditional learner w ho needs to see and
do rather than listen , w
ho reasons w ith im
ages rather than w ords,
T im
is on the other end of the splitter-lum per scale. H
e can see w
h ole forests easily, but usually lacks the patience to go in and
analyze the trees. H e jum
ps into the m iddle of situ
ations and m ay
intuitively com e up w
ith the right so lu
tio n
-o r one that is w
ay off base. H
e can 't organize him
self- or his strategies for schoolw
ork. "H
ow can he read so carelessly and still get the idea?" his E
nglish teacher
asks. "T
im
gets the
answ er but can
't w
rite out
the equation," com
plains his m ath teacher. S
om etim
es, if people are w
illing to listen as T im
struggles to describe it, his id ea is "w
eird b
u t w
onderful." T h
e T im
s of this w orld usually have a harder tim
e in sch
ool than the C arls, but not because they lack ability. If they
get out of school w ith th
eir self-esteem still intact, they are often
very successful in the '·real w orld
." If your child is like T im
, your w
ork is cut out for you, but the first step m ust be to get rid of the
w ords "lazy" and "stupid
." E
valuating T im
's strengths and w eakn
esses helped m e and his
parents und erstand som
e of his inconsistencies. F or exam
ple, he liked m
ath in elem entary school but now
found him self unable to
"get it." H e didn
't realize that earlier m ath classes had involved a
lot of doing –
w ritin
g on the board, and m anip
ulating objects and sh
apes. N ow
he w as in a class w
h ere the teacher taught by talkin
g. C
onsidering T im
's difficulty w ith rem
em bering even one sentence
at a tim e, it is n
o surprise he w
as in trouble. I explained to T
im th
at h
e needs to ask th
e teach er to show
exam ples in addition to telling
him , an
d th
at h e needs to w
rite problem s in his notebook as w
ell as sit an
d listen (or fail to!). F
ortunately, his teachers w ere all
w illing to cooperate b
ecause they recognized th at h
e really w anted
to im
prove. T
im w
as m issing hom
ew ork assignm
ents that, teachers being only h
u m
an, w ere often given quickly at th
e en d
o f class: "O
h, b y
th
e w ay, tom
orrow 's hom
ew ork is to
do all th e odd-num
bered exam
ples on pages seventeen an
d tw
enty an d
w rite a
short paragraph ab
o u
t the effects o f clim
atic conditions o n
fossil form
ation." F orget it! (T
hat's w h
at T im
usually did.) T im
's parents w
en t to the school to
explain th at he needed to
have directions w
ritten d o
w n
o r given m
ore slow ly. H
e m ay eventually need to
use a tap
e recorder, as som e students do, in lJ.t_gh school lectu
re classes an
d use som
e type o f electronic device to sp
eed up n
o te-taking an
d
help w ith organization. S
im ultaneously, he can practice trying to
rem em
ber longer an d
longer chunks b y
repeating th em
back an d
w
orking on im proving his sum
m arizing skills. U
nderstan d
ing his style does not m
ean low
ering o u
r ultim ate expectations for him
. T
im 's quick intelligence h
ad succeeded in m
asking th e serious
deficits in his reading skills, b u
t h e finally adm
itted they w ere
causing him a great deal o
f trouble. H e began to w
ork w ith a special
tu to
r w ho focused on th
e basics h e had m
issed o u
t on earlier, an d
he soon show
ed rapid im provem
ent in b o
th reading an d
spelling. S
he also helped him w
ith stu dy skills and n
o te-taking.
A t hom
e, in addition to reassuring rum th
at all this w ork is w
orth th
e effort, T im
's parents can h elp him
o rganize lo
nger reading assignm
ents in a visual form . T
im took readily to m
ap ping ideas
to help him rem
em ber w
hat h e has studied. It is also never too late
to w ork on language developm
ent and exp ressio
n o
f ideas at the dinner table; th
ese habits m ay can
y over in
to in creased classroom
participation.
P arents
can help
w ith
auditory m
em ory
by practicing a lim
ited num ber of directions at a tim
e. ("P lease go
upstairs, close your
bedroom
w indow
, and
bring dow
n the
new spaper.") T
hey w ill und
oubtedly have to help him organize his
h om
ew ork tim
e and be available to proofread reports. A com
puter h
elps him be m
ore fluent and accurate in h is w
riting. S tud
ents like
T im
often like to study to m usic; if it w
orks, let rum .
T he b
ad new
s for T im
is th at h
e w ill have to w
ork harder in school th
an som
e o f his frien
ds. T he good n
ew s is th
at h e can su
cceed
both in school and, m ore im
portantly, w hen real life exerts a
differen t
set o
f dem
ands. T
he ultim
ate success
o f
m any
"n o
n traditional" learners confirm
s this pattern as different, n o
t in
ferior. D
oes accepting
divergen t
learning styles
m ean
low ering
academ ic standards? N
o! H elping children achieve an
d enjoy
learning can only im prove the intellectual clim
ate. P arents an
d
teachers m ust take the tim
e and effort to m eet individual needs
w ithout caving in o
n expectations. T ruly, w
e all have o u
r w ork cut
ou t for us!
D ifferen
t D ru
m m
ers
T his ch
apter has been about m aking co
nnections- betw
een the h
em ispheres, betw
een the sexes, betw een individ
uals. W e are ju
st beginning to explore th
e neural variations that underlie the
colorful m osaic of hum
an talent. D iffe1,ences m
ake us interesting and provide society w
ith a broad pool o f abilities. U
nderlying the history o
f hum an accom
plishm ent are m
yriad com binations ofleft
an d
right, m ale an
d fem ale, Jum
pers and splitters. T he m
ost effective thinkers are those w
ho can link their m ental talents in
vaiying co
m binations-
w ho
can see
ideas and
plan their
im plem
entation, grasp a total problem and analyze its elem
ents, create and com
m unicate.
W e're not yet su
re w here people get their unique styles of taking
o n the w
orld, o r how
m uch w
e can-o r should-
c hange th
em . T
he suggestions in this book are for expanding, not altering. I hope you w
ill apply them w
ith th e love and com
m on sense that are your
paren tal gifts. B
y broadening bridges, you can ease your child's in
tellectual passage, fo r differences often cause children pain
. A
dults are
privileged because
th ey
are respected
and even
acclaim ed for un
iq ueness. T
hey choose th e arenas in w
hich they w
ish to appear and avoid th ose w
here they are inept. C hildren are
not so lu cky. If their skills are unbalan
ced, if the school fails to app
reciate their gifts,
there is little respite from
inadequacy.
16 0
o f 330
P arents, frustrated by their child's defeats, can easily lose sight of
talents th at reach beyond th
e classroom w
alls. O
ne little girl, a fourth grader w hose m
ain strengths are creative an
d intuitive, cam
e u p
w ith an
im portant though
t one day as w e
w ere
discussing a
story about
prejudice. F
ace clenched
in concentration, she struggled m
ightily to find w
ords for her idea. H
ere they are:
F eelin
gs a b
o u
t O th
ers
Som e people are nicer
B ecause th
eir brains
A re d
ifferently attached to their hearts
T han other p
eop le's.
N o m
atter how you
r child's brain is attached, I hope you can respect th
at sing ular pattern even
as you help to integrate its
design . Society n
eeds pathw ays to
th e future built by effective,
fleidble, and interesting lninds.
