Archive for the ‘Right Brain Education School’ category

Five Simple Ways to Encourage Right-Brain Thinking in Your Child

May 7th, 2012

The idea of right brain and left brain thinking is a theory based on research from an American psychobiologist Roger W. Sperry, in the 1960s. Dr. Sperry discovered that the two halves of the human brain process information in very different ways.

The right side of the brain is very visual and intuitive. Right-brain thinkers tend to see the “big picture” more easily and therefore are very visual and processes information in intuitive and conceptual ways. That is why so many right brain dominants are great artists.

The left side of the brain is our verbal, logical and analytical side. Our left brain processes are important for organizing and sequencing information. That is why many right brain thinkers (I have two in my family) have a more difficult time with traditional workbooks, math and tests.

Of course both sides of the brain work together in a very complex way we don’t fully understand. Encouraging right-brain thinking in your child is simple and will enrich their lives in many ways as the grow and develop. It can help your child learn how to draw better, be more imaginative and even play a musical instrument well.

Five simple ways to encourage the right brain

  1. Throw out the coloring books. Provide your child with an unlimited supply of paper, pencils and crayons. This encourages your child to create his own shape and style and “draw outside of the lines.”
  2. Turn off the television and limit the computer and video games. Too much television and “electronic entertainment” is a creativity killer. Many children will choose watching television or Xbox over more beneficial activities. If the TV is off and mom says, “no Xbox today,” they will be forced to look for other things to do (this is the time to break out the art supplies).
  3. Expose your child to beautiful artwork, starting at an early age. Postcard-sized art prints are available in booklets featuring a specific artist at Dover Publications and can be looked at and handled by small children. Books such as DK Annotated Guides, Great Artist by Robert Cummings (ISBN 0-7894-2391-X), are great books to look at with your children and keep on the coffee table for them to browse through.
  4. » Read more: Five Simple Ways to Encourage Right-Brain Thinking in Your Child

Whole Brain Leadership

May 7th, 2012

In Western society, particularly America, leadership is typically left-brained.

Why? Because leaders are chosen for their knowledge…their knowledge of a particular industry, and how and where all of the stovepipes of the industry go, and how they must function to make the business work…how all the widgets fit together to make the perfect product.

And where does knowledge come from? The left brain. The side of the brain that thinks linearly, making logical, rational decisions.

To the present time, we have created, trained and chosen leaders who are “well-educated manipulators of information and deployers of expertise.” We have taught in our schools and in our businesses the logical, linear thinking that created the Information Age.

There is now more than ample evidence to suggest an imperative for immediate change in how we train and select our leaders!

In A Whole New Mind, a current New York Times and Business Week bestseller, Daniel Pink asserts that “for nearly a century, Western society in general, and American society in particular, has been dominated by a form of thinking and an approach to life that is narrowly reductive and deeply analytical.” He argues that we are entering an age where the “left brain” capabilities that have powered the last century will not be enough. Anyone who wants to survive and thrive in the new emerging world, what he calls “the Conceptual Age,” will need right brain “inventive, empathic, big-picture capabilities.”

Organizations that succeed will need to retrain or replace left brain leadership with whole brain leadership. Whole brain leadership will champion the creative processes of innovation.

Today’s businesses realize that in what is obviously a rapidly changing business climate, leaders must be more responsive, more adaptive, more innovative than they they have ever been. Many large businesses now tout the benefits and values of innovation, yet leadership remains ensconced in left brain training and implementation of business practices and programs that lacks reward for innovation and creativity.

How many organizations ask their employees to develop stories, to use their imaginations, to be subjective rather than objective, or to look at and value interdepartmental relationships in a contextual rather than segmented sense?

How many organizations truly encourage and reward “out of the box” thinking? Are meetings where ideas are “tossed at the wall”; where no idea is a bad idea, and fun and participation is really endorsed, the “norm” or the exception? Or do most of your organization’s group meetings fail not only to get the best possible solutions, but fail to generate contributions to get solutions?

To advance into the new “Conceptual Age”, America and Western Society, needs to change its educational process –to create a seamless transition from the time a student enters the educational system until they leave it to enter the business world. Rather than dropping their art, music and drama programs, educational facilities need to enhance them, and add these elements throughout the entire teaching process. In addition to preparing students to enter the new world of business, it may well be the missing element needed to stem the alarming drop-out rate. By stimulating the creativity and innovation of the right brain, and balancing left-brain/right-brain teaching, education may renew students’ interest, and be revived to include teaching not only what to think, but how to think.

» Read more: Whole Brain Leadership