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Brain Gym only takes 5 to 10 minutes to implement each day and gains hours to productivity and improved performance.

It requires no special equipment or space - the program is simply integrated into the classroom.

Since 1990, Brain Gym has been selected annually by the National Learning Foundation as one of today's leading technologies for education.

Research studies show improvement of 50 - 86%

Brain Gym is a simple program to enhance ones learning ability.

Brain Gym consists of 26 easy and enjoyable targeted activities and processes which bring about rapid and often dramatic improvements in concentration, memory, reading, writing, organizing, listening, physical coordination, and more.

Brain Gym develops the brain's neural pathways the way nature does: through movement.

Brain Gym is built upon 80 years of research by specialists in physical movement, education, and child development. The specific research that lead to Brain Gym was started in 1969 by Paul Dennison, Ph.D. Dr. Dennison, who was then Director of California's 8 Valley Remedial Group Learning Centers, was looking for ways to help children and adults who had been identified as "learning disabled." His research led him to the study of kinesiology, the science of body movement and its relationship to brain function.

At the time, it was already well established that coordinated physical movement is necessary to brain development. Babies and young children naturally perform what experts in early childhood education call developmental movements. These movements develop the neural connections in the brain, which are essential to learning.

Dr. Dennison discovered ways to adapt and sequence these movements so they could be effective for older children and adults. The result is a system of targeted activities that enhance performance in all areas - intellectual, creative, athletic, and interpersonal.

Endorsed by the National Learning Foundation

Brain Gym has been taught worldwide in thousands of public and private schools. It has been shown to be effective in published studies, and it is being incorporated into a growing number of corporate, institutional, and athletic training programs.

Since 1990, Brain Gym¨ has been selected annually by the National Learning Foundation as one of today's leading technologies for education.

 

Testimonials:

Because of his short attention span, my 11-year-old son was faced with taking ritalin. Brain Gym activities allowed him to stay focused and pay attention without chemicals. His teacher was astounded at the immediate and positive changes.

- Sandy Zachary, Social Administrator

 

I was asked to work with a seventy-eight-year-old man who was still very strong and handsome but suffering from Alzheimers disease... I worked with him, doing some Brain Gym activities and Repatterning procedures. After the first session, the man remembered his wife's name and was able to recognise and name some of the colours... During the third session, he began to remember many words and the names of his children, and when I gave him my hand to say good-bye, he kissed it, with tears in his eyes. I was surprised that he had remembered his good manners, and he answered my surprise by saying, 'A man must be a gentleman.'

- Svetlana Musgutova, Ph.D

 

We taught Brain Gym to 11 children who had difficulty learning. After five days, their test scores showed an average improvement in reading skills of 1.2 years, and in math skills of .32 years, yet we taught no reading or math

- Pat and David Saunders, Special Ed.

 

A Summary of a Brain Gym Research Project on Reading

Cecilia K. Freeman, M.Ed.
(from Brain Gym Journal, December 2000)

Given my deep desire to get Brain Gym into the schools, as well as the enormous amount of conversation about the need for longitudinal research on the effects of Brain Gym¨ on academic skills, in 1998 I set out to do a year long research project at an elementary school.

To accomplish this task, I engaged the assistance of Brain Gym Consultant Joyce B. Sherwood. The report for this pilot project offers data supporting the finding that students in grades three, four, and five who used Brain Gym throughout the year improved their reading test scores on a statewide standardized test (the Stanford 9) twice as much as did the students in the control group who did not use Brain Gym as a part of their learning. These are remarkable results-both academically and statistically.

Having formerly worked as a classroom teacher in a special day class for severely challenged students on this particular campus, I approached principal Paul Jablonowski at Saticoy Elementary School in Ventura, California, with the request to conduct this project with some of his students. I received his consent and was met with open arms and great enthusiasm for the project by the twelve teachers whose classrooms would be involved. These teachers agreed to the following:

1. To meet for one hour after school every Monday throughout the school year.

2. To do a minimum of fifteen minutes of Brain Gym each day, integrated into the daily activities of the classroom rather than in a fifteen-minute block of time.

3. To allow students-selected by each teacher-to leave class one time each month for a thirty-minute session of Brain Gym within a small group, facilitated by a Brain Gym Consultant.

4. To invite Brain Gym Consultants to do classroom consultations a minimum of two times during the school year.

5. To allow students’ test scores to be gathered for data comparison. An equal number of student scores were gathered from the school files to serve as a control group, with the permission of the teachers in those classrooms.

Throughout the school year, enthusiasm and follow-through remained high. All of the above agreements were carried out. We arranged a special Parents Night which drew an astonishing crowd of 120 to inform the parents about Brain Gym and explain how their children were using it in the classroom. In addition, the participating classroom teachers papered their walls with suggested Brain Gym materals, instructed students in the task-appropriate use of the Brain Gym movemnts, and reminded the young people about which Brain Gym activities to do prior to undertaking a homework assignment. The teachers learned the Brain Gym execises and subsequently taught their students. As I passed through the halls when we were only three months into the project, I saw children using Brain Gym throughoutthe school day, even without teacher direction.

The students who continued to have difficulty with their reading skills were seen by a Brain Gym Consultant in small groups of two to four. In these groups, balances* were facilitated to remediate specific difficulties related to such areas as attention and comprehension, fine- or gross-motor coordination, or specific academic skills.

The results of this pilot project were phenomenal. Students self-esteem improved, the classroom climate became more calm, the students reported how much easier their reading had become, and the teachers expressed deep gratitude for this simple, effective tool that enhanced their teaching strategies.

I also gathered test data from the Stanford 9. The following graphs illustrate the effectiveness of the use of Brain Gym in the classroom. Students in each grade level who experienced the Brain Gym activities improved their test scores twice as much as did the students in the control group who did not practice Brain Gym.

Given these results, I believe that all reading programs would benefit by infusing Brain Gym into the school day. Whether the approach is phonics, guided reading, or Reading Recovery, testing should inform instruction-rather than the other way around. Let us use this research to inform ourselves. We need to encourage classroom teachers everywhere to add Brain Gym activities to their teaching strategies.

One grateful parent volunteer summarized community responses with the following letter:

"To Whom It May Concern: I am writing in regard to the Brain Gym Program that is being taught at my child’s school. These small, but effective techniques have helped my daughter excel in class immensely. Her ability to focus, concentrate and complete class assignments increase after each morning’s pace exercise. The class as a whole, in which I volunteer two times a week, seems to calm down and show improvement with listening as well as performing the days’ tasks.
I am sure as time goes by, the children will only benefit from this Educational Kinesiology brought to our schools. Each day a different exercise is introduced and children are evaluated individually to meet their own specific needs in class. Getting in touch with your mind through the body sounds fantastic. What a wonderful way to begin a life‹positive, healthy and strong. The perfect way to create a successful adult."

This report can be read to glean classroom ideas. It can also be shared with administrators or used to replicate Cecilia’s study.

A copy of the entire research report may be acquired from the author for $20, plus postage, in U.S. funds. www.iamthechild.com

Cecilia K. Freeman, M.Ed., is a former classroom teacher and one of the leading experts in the educational use of Brain Gym. Though her specialty is working with children and adults who have special needs, her love of all children compels her to also work with general education students. She is the author, with Gail E. Dennison, of I Am the Child: Using Brain Gym with Children Who Have Special Needs. Cecilia consults nationwide, doing teacher in-services as well as teaching Brain Gym for Special Education Providers, a course she developed for the Educational Kinesiology Foundation. In honor of her research project on reading, Cecilia has been designated a recipient of the Educational Kinesiology Founders Award for outstanding research for the year 1999-2000.


Irena Kirpichnikova is a licensed Brain Gym Instructors through the Educational Kinesiology Foundation / Brain Gym International, which holds the Brain Gym trademark. For more information about Brain Gym visit www.braingym.org.