The Science
The brain can be re-wired.
The brain can be trained to work more efficiently.
Exercising the brain helps develop efficient learners.
Efficient brains learn better and faster.
MRI has proven Fast ForWord's ability to re-wire the brain.
Norman Doidge, M.D., psychiatrist, psychoanalyst, and researcher on the faculty at the University of Toronto's Department of Psychiatry and the Columbia University Center for Psychoanalytic Training and Research in New York, as well as an author, essayist, and poet. Dr Doidge is the author of the internationally acclaimed book The Brain That Changes Itself. He is a four-time recipient of Canada's National Magazine Gold Award.
Read Norman Doidge, M.D.'s Chapter 3 in The Brain That Changes Itself where he discusses the programs we ues and the dramatic impact they have on children who are struggling with learning disabilities and challenges.
Neuroplasticity
In the last thirty years the science of neuroplasticity has given us
the knowledge that the brain is plastic. This means that the brain
can be moulded and shaped from birth through old age.
Neuroplasticity combines the words neuron and plastic. Neurons
are the means by which information is electrically transmitted
within the brain. Plastic, meaning capable of being moulded. In
the case of the brain, plasticity refers to the making, changing or
strengthening of neural connections and pathways.
Neuroplasticity has revealed that brains are not hard-wired at a
young age as was previously thought, but that brains can be strengthened and rewired to work more efficiently. The science has provided an understanding of how the brain processes information. In particular, we now understand what areas of the brain are optimal for processing different kinds of information.
Our software programs exercise areas of the brain responsible for efficient learning. Brains cannot be taught how to think, they must be strengthened through exercises. Much in the same way as an athlete cannot be taught how to do their sport, they must practice.
fMRI and Learning
The advent of fMRI scans (functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging) made it possible to see what areas of the brain are activated when someone is listening (receiving auditory input), looking (experiencing visual stimulation) and reading. The fMRI has shown that struggling students use very different areas of their brain than main stream learners use for these tasks. The fMRI has further shown that students who have completed training develop new neural pathways similar to those of students who do not struggle. fMRIs further show that students who have completed training activate areas of their brain that were previously inactive.
At Reading & Learning Pathways we will work with your child to find the programs best suited for them. The programs will simultaneously develop the essential skills of memory, attention, processing and sequencing which are integrally linked to successful learning. The results are enduring and continue to develop beyond the period of training.

"Neuroplasticity is "one of the most extraordinary discoveries of the twentieth century".
- Norman Doidge, M.D.
Neuroplasticity, a scientific way of saying that frequent and intense repetitive exercises create new and efficient pathways in the brain
Auditory Processing Disorder, Autism Spectrum Disorder, Aspergers Syndrome, Autistic, Academic High Achievers, Summer Education, Summer Enrichment, Summer Camp, Summer Learning, Reading Camps, Reading Help, Summer Program, Teen learning Camps, Signature Inuksuk Summer program, Brain Injury (TBI and ABI), Central Auditory Processing Disorder, CAPD, Cognitive Disorder, Cognitive Skills Training, Cognitive Development, Homeschooling Programs, Disorder of Written Expression, Dyslexia, ELL, ESL, English Language Learner, Gifted, Learning Disabled, Language Disorders, Learning Disabilities, Pre-Readers, Reading programs, Mild Intellectual Disabilities, Neuroplasticity, PDD-NOS, Fast ForWord, Sensory Integration Dysfunction, Sensory Processing Disorder, Sensory issues, Tourette Syndrome, Summer Reading Programs, Help for struggling learners, Speech and Language Disabilities, Physicians, Paediatricians, Audiologists, Psychologists, Occupational Therapists, Physical Therapists