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Friday, November 28, 2014

Free Download How to Teach Your Baby to Read (The Gentle Revolution Series), by Glenn Doman Janet Doman

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How to Teach Your Baby to Read (The Gentle Revolution Series), by Glenn Doman Janet Doman

How to Teach Your Baby to Read (The Gentle Revolution Series), by Glenn Doman Janet Doman


How to Teach Your Baby to Read (The Gentle Revolution Series), by Glenn Doman Janet Doman


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How to Teach Your Baby to Read (The Gentle Revolution Series), by Glenn Doman Janet Doman

About the Author

Glenn Doman received his degree in physical therapy from the University of Pennsylvania in 1940. From that point on, he began pioneering the field of child brain development. In 1955, he founded The Institutes' world-renowned work with brain-injured children had led to vital discoveries regarding the growth and development of well children. The author has lived with, studied, and worked with children in more than one hundred nations, ranging from the most civilized to the most primitive. Doman is also the international best-selling author of six books, all part of the Gentle Revolution Series, including How To Teach Yor Baby To Read, How To Teach Your Baby Math, and How To Give Your Baby Encyclopedic Knowledge.

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Beginning a project in clinical research is like getting on a train with an unknown destination. It’s full of mystery and excitement but you never know whether you’ll have a compartment or be going third class, whether the train has a diner or not, whether the trip will cost a dollar or all you’ve got and, most of all, whether you are going to end up where you intended or in a foreign place you never dreamed of visiting. When our team members got on this train at the various stations, we were hoping that our destination was better treatment for severely brain-injured children. None of us dreamed that if we achieved that goal, we would stay right on the train till we reached a place where brain-injured children might even be made superior to unhurt children. The trip has thus far taken a half-century. The accommodations were third class and the diner served mostly sandwiches, night after night, often at three in the morning. The tickets cost all we had, and while some of us did not live long enough to finish the trip none of us would have missed it for anything else the world has to offer. It’s been a fascinating trip. The original passenger list included a brain surgeon, a physiatrist (an M.D. who specializes in physical medicine and rehabilitation), a physical therapist, a speech therapist, a psychologist, an educator, and a nurse. Now there are more than a hundred of us all told, with many additional kinds of specialists. The little team was formed originally because each of us was individually charged with some phase of the treatment of severely brain-injured children―and each of us individually was failing. If you are going to choose a creative field in which to work, it is difficult to pick one with more room for improvement than one in which failure has been one hundred percent and success is nonexistent. When we began our work together over fifty years ago we had never seen, or heard of, a single brain-injured child who had ever gotten well. The group that formed after our individual failures would today be called a rehabilitation team. In those days so long ago, neither of those words were fashionable and we looked upon ourselves as nothing so grand as all that. Perhaps we saw ourselves more practically and more clearly as a group who had banded together, much as a convoy does, hoping that we would be stronger together than we had proved to be separately. We began by attacking the most basic problem that faced those who dealt with brain-injured children fifty years ago. This problem was identification. There were three very different kinds of children with problems who were invariably mixed together as if they were the same. The fact is that they were not even ninety-second cousins. They got lumped together in those days (and, tragically, they still are in much of the world) for the very poor reason that they frequently look, and sometimes act, the same. The three kinds of children who were constantly put together were deficient children with brains that were qualitatively and quantitatively inferior, psychotic children with physically normal brains but unsound minds, and finally truly brain-injured children who had good brains but which had been physically hurt. We were concerned only with the last type of children, who had suffered injuries to a brain that at conception was perfectly good. We came to learn that although the truly deficient child and the truly psychotic child were comparatively few in number, hundreds of thousands of children were, and are, diagnosed as deficient or psychotic, while they were actually brain-injured children. Generally such mistaken diagnoses came about because many of the brain-injured children incurred injuries to a good brain before they were born. When we had learned, after many years of work in the operating room and at the bedside, which children were truly brain-injured, we could then begin to attack the problem itself―the injured brain. We discovered that it mattered very little (except from a research point of view) whether a child had incurred his injury prenatally, at the instant of birth, or postnatally. This was rather like being concerned about whether a child had been hit by an automobile before noon, at noon, or after noon. What really mattered was which part of his brain had been hurt, how much it had been hurt, and what might be done about it. We discovered further that it mattered very little whether a child’s good brain had been hurt as a result of his parents having an incompatible Rh factor, his mother having had an infectious disease such as German measles during the first three months of pregnancy, insufficient oxygen having reached his brain during the prenatal period, or because he had been born prematurely. The brain can also be hurt as a result of protracted labor, by the child’s falling on his head at two months of age and suffering blood clots on his brain, by having a high temperature with encephalitis at three years of age, by being struck by an automobile at five years of age, or by any of a hundred other factors. Again, while this was significant from the research point of view, it was rather like worrying about whether a particular child had been hit by a car or a hammer. The important thing here was which part of the child’s brain was hurt, how much it was hurt, and what we were going to do about it. In those early days, the world that dealt with brain-injured children held the view that the problems of these children might be solved by treating the symptoms which existed in the ears, eyes, nose, mouth, chest, shoulders, elbows, wrist, fingers, hips, knees, ankles, and toes. A large portion of the world still believes this today. Such an approach did not work then and could not possibly work. Because of this total lack of success, we concluded that if we were to solve the multiple symptoms of the brain-injured child we would have to attack the source of the problem and approach the human brain itself. While at first this seemed an impossible or at least monumental task, in the years that followed we and others found both surgical and nonsurgical methods of treating the brain itself. We held the simple belief that to treat the symptoms of an illness or injury, and to expect the disease to disappear, was unmedical, unscientific, and irrational, and if all these reasons were not enough to make us abandon such an attack, then the simple fact remained that brain-injured children approached in such a manner never got well. On the contrary, we felt that if we could attack the problem itself, the symptoms would disappear spontaneously to the exact extent of our success in dealing with the injury in the brain itself. First we tackled the problem from a nonsurgical standpoint. In the years that followed, we became persuaded that if we could hope to succeed with the hurt brain itself we would have to find ways to reproduce in some manner the neurological growth patterns of a well child. This meant understanding how a well child’s brain begins, grows, and matures. We studied intently many hundreds of well newborn babies, infants, and children. We studied them very carefully. As we learned what normal brain growth is and means, we began to find that the simple and long-known basic activities of well children, such as crawling and creeping, are of the greatest possible importance to the brain. We learned that if such activities are denied well children, because of cultural, environmental, or social factors, their potential is severely limited. The potential of brain-injured children is even more affected. As we learned more about ways to reproduce this normal physical pattern of growing up, we began to see brain-injured children improve―ever so slightly. It was at about this time that the neurosurgical components of our team began to prove conclusively that the answer lay in the brain itself, by developing successful surgical approaches to it. There were certain types of brain-injured children whose problems were of a progressive nature, and these children had consistently died early. Chief among these were the hydrocephalics, the children with “water on the brain.” Such children had huge heads due to the pressure of cerebrospinal fluid that could not be reabsorbed in the normal manner due to their injuries. Nevertheless the fluid continued to be created as in normal people. No one had ever been quite so foolish as to try to treat the symptoms of this disease by massage or exercise or braces. As the pressure on the brain increased these children had always died. Our neurosurgeon, working with an engineer, developed a tube which carried the excess cerebrospinal fluid from the reservoirs called the ventricles, deep inside the human brain, to the jugular vein and thus into the blood stream, where it could be reabsorbed in the normal manner. This tube had within it an ingenious valve that would permit the excess fluid to flow outward while simultaneously preventing the blood from flowing back into the brain. This almost magical device was surgically implanted within the brain and was called “the V-J shunt.” The lives of more than twenty-five thousand children were saved by this simple tube. Many of these children were able to live completely normal lives and go to school with their peers. This was beautiful evidence of the complete futility of attacking the symptoms of brain injury, as well as the unassailable logic and necessity for treating the hurt brain itself. Another startling method will serve as an example of the many types of successful brain surgery that are in use today to solve the problems of the brain-injured child. There are actually two brains, a right brain and a left brain. These two brains are divided right down the middle of the head from front to rear. In well human beings, the right brain (or, if you like, the right half of the brain) is responsible for controlling the left side of the body, while the left half of the brain is responsible for running the right side of the body. If one half of the brain is hurt to any large degree, the results are catastrophic. The opposite side of the body will be paralyzed, and the child will be severely restricted in all functions. In those days some children had constant, severe, and convulsive seizures which did not respond to any known medication. It need hardly be said that such children also die. The ancient cry of those who stood for doing nothing had been chanted over and over for decades. “When a brain cell is dead it is dead and nothing can be done for children with dead brain cells, so don’t try.” But by 1955 the neurosurgical members of our group were performing an almost unbelievable kind of surgery on such children; it is called hemispherectomy. Hemispherectomy is precisely what that name implies―the surgical removal of half of the human brain. At that time we saw children with half a brain in the head and with the other half, billions of brain cells, in ajar at the hospital―dead and gone. But the children were not dead. Instead we saw children with only half a brain who walked, talked, and went to school like other children. Several such children were above, average, and at least one of them had an I.Q. in the genius area. We had long held that, contrary to popular belief, a child might have ten dead brain cells and we would not even know it. Perhaps, we said, he might have a hundred dead brain cells, and we would not be aware of it. Perhaps, we said, even a thousand. Not in our wildest dreams had we dared to believe that a child might have billions of dead brain cells and yet perform almost as well and sometimes even better than an average child. Now the reader must join us in a speculation. How long could we look at Johnny, who had half his brain removed, and see him perform as well as Billy, who had an intact brain, without asking the question, “What is wrong with Billy?” Why did not Billy, who had twice as much brain as Johnny, perform twice as well or at least better? Having seen this happen over and over again, we began to look with new and questioning eyes at average children. Were average children doing as well as they might? Here was an important question we had never dreamed of asking. In the meantime, the nonsurgical members of the team had acquired a great deal more knowledge of how such children grow and how their brains develop. As our knowledge of normality increased, our simple methods for reproducing that normality in brain-injured children kept pace. By now we were beginning to see a small number of brain-injured children reach wellness by the use of the simple nonsurgical methods of treatment which were steadily evolving and improving. It is not the purpose of this book to detail either the concepts or the methods used to solve the multiple problems of brain-injured children. The book What To Do About Your Brain-Injured Child deals with the treatment of the brain-injured child. However, the fact that this is being accomplished daily is of significance in understanding the pathway which led to the knowledge that well children can perform infinitely better than they are doing at present. It is sufficient to say that extremely simple techniques were devised to reproduce, in brain-injured children, the patterns of normal development. Soon we began to see severely brain-injured children whose performance rivaled that of children who had not suffered a brain injury. As these techniques improved even more, we began to see brain-injured children emerge who could not only perform as well as average children but, indeed, who could not be distinguished from them. As our understanding of neurological growth and normality began to assume a really clear pattern, and as methods for the recapitulation of normality multiplied, we even began to see some brain-injured children who performed at above-average, or even superior, levels. It was exciting beyond measure. It was even a little bit frightening. It seemed clear that we had, at the very least, underestimated every child’s potential. This raised a fascinating question. Suppose we looked at three seven-year-old children: Albert, who had half his brain in the jar; Billy, who had a perfectly normal brain; and Charley, who had been treated nonsurgically and who now performed in a totally normal way, although he still had millions of brain cells dead and gone. Albert, with half his brain gone, was as intelligent as Billy. So was Charley, with millions of dead cells in his head. What was wrong with nice, average, unhurt Billy? What was wrong with well children? For years our work had been charged with the vibrancy that one feels prior to important events and great discoveries. Through the years the all-enveloping fog of mystery which surrounded our brain-injured children had gradually dispelled. We had also begun to see other facts for which we had not bargained. These were facts about well children. A logical connection had emerged between the brain-injured (and therefore neurologically disorganized) child and the well (and therefore neurologically organized) child, where earlier there were only disconnected and disassociated facts about well children. That logical sequence, as it emerged, had pointed insistently to a path by which we might markedly change man himself―and for the better. Was the neurological organization displayed by an average child necessarily the end of the path? Now with brain-injured children performing as well as, or better than, average children, the possibility of the path extending farther could be fully seen. It had always been assumed that neurological growth and its end product, ability, were a static and irrevocable fact: This child was capable and that child was not. This child was bright and that child was not. Nothing could be further from the truth. The fact is that neurological growth, which, we had always considered a static and irrevocable fact, is a dynamic and ever-changing process. In the severely brain-injured child we see the process of neurological growth totally halted. In the “developmentally delayed” child we see this process of neurological growth considerably slowed. In the average child it takes place at an average rate, and in the superior child, at above-average speed. We had now come to realize that the brain-injured child, the average child, and the superior child are not three different kinds of children but instead represent a continuum ranging from the extreme neurological disorganization which severe brain injury creates, through the more moderate neurological disorganization caused by mild or moderate brain injury, through the average amount of neurological organization which the average child demonstrates, to the high degree of neurological organization which a superior child invariably demonstrates. In the severely brain-injured child we had succeeded in restarting this process which had come to a halt, and in the “developmentally delayed” child we had accelerated it. It was now clear that this process of neurological growth could be speeded as well as delayed. Having repeatedly brought brain-injured children from neurological disorganization to neurological organization of an average or even superior level by employing the simple nonsurgical program that had been developed, there was every reason to believe that this same program could be used to increase the amount of neurological organization demonstrated by average children. Part of this program is to teach very young brain-injured children to read. Nowhere is the ability to raise neurological organization more clearly demonstrated than when you teach a well baby to read.

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Product details

Series: The Gentle Revolution Series

Paperback: 288 pages

Publisher: Square One; Revised edition (February 28, 2006)

Language: English

ISBN-10: 9780757001857

ISBN-13: 978-0757001857

ASIN: 0757001858

Product Dimensions:

5.5 x 0.8 x 8.2 inches

Shipping Weight: 12.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)

Average Customer Review:

4.4 out of 5 stars

264 customer reviews

Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#38,393 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

This book is so much more than just teaching your baby to read. It goes into the psychology and what babies are actually capable of if given the chance. Very informative read. When he states you must go quickly you really must. I tried to slow it down and be a little goofy with my daughter. This distracted her, she became somewhat bored, and wanted the cards to eat (bc paper is the tastiest treat to a 10 month old).Down side is he doesnt say if using an ipad or tech device would still suffice instead of cards (my husband is cheap, also i live overseas and supplies arent as easy to come by). Overall a good read and am working in reading the math book from this author now.

I bought this book many years ago, and attempted the method several times.The drawback is that there is yet a better less boring, less time consuming, and more forgiving (no need for rigid consistency) approach.The problem here is the use of symbols, instead of images that makes this method inneficient, and hence the need to keep showing the flashcards over and over for a week. And even then it's questionable whether some words have gone into long term memory, as it was apparent with my dyslexic daughter years later when I attempted it once more at 4.5 yo.Instead of doing this, follow the graphic flashcard method by child1st called snapwords or by "picture it reading".Show it 1 or 2x a day, for 1 or 2 days and the information will become etched in children's visual memory.The good news is that it will even work for visual spacial dyslexic children, if this runs in the family.

I love all the Glenn Doman books and have used them with varying degrees with all my children. We are now into the second generation. I attended the course at the Institute and am a firm believer that it does make a difference. My kids are very well adjusted and extremely accomplished and people always ask how I raised such smart, well adjusted children. Did I do everything as those who participate in the Institute did. NO! I have a very busy career, am a community volunteer, wife, & daughter to aging parents! I did what I could, and made it fun for all of us. People thought I was nuts at the time so I seldom talked about the program but enjoyed seeing the results. When my daughter was in ninth grade and took European history, she could name all the European painters without studying them. She was amazed! She kept asking, "Mom how do I know this?" I confess, I love art and spent a great deal of time making cards on the great artist when she was little. I am an interior designer. I believe her brain stored this information until she needed it. Today, this child is working on her M.D./PhD in neuroscience. She is happy and well adjusted as are my other kids. I find it so interesting to see how all the areas, such as physical, math, reading, speaking, relate to each other. By the way, I always played foreign language tapes in the car when the kids were little, and we watched foreign language cartoons I checked out of the library... all my children are fluent in several languages, even tho I can only speak English! The brain is amazing and babies are sponges wanting to learn! Regardless if youchoose to believe in this program or not, make learning fun for your little one and you will be amazed at the results! For me personally, this was best thing I ever did!

I have recommended this book to no less than five couples. My wife and I have seen the results first hand with our baby--attention, curiosity, motor skills, reflexes, strong back muscles and spine. Here's another great advantage: the exercises create a constructive routine for you and your child that fills the time you spend with them (which seem forever in the period before they can creep and sit up, hence play with toys by themselves)--as a parent it's a relief to have something to do with your child and knowing you're helping their brain and body develop.So.. why 4 not 5 stars? The books explains the exercises but doesn't provide a clear, summarized manual of those exercises (think log sheet or manual). Luckily, I found one online and downloaded (for free) all the exercises for each stage of development. Priceless.Buy this book.

It teaches about brain injured children as well as I can angle my mind in ways of teaching my autism child.The book does say start teaching your young child five word by showing them and saying the first. It gives great instruction how to do so- read more on that. My autism child- I did so...I concluded to start him with two words being his name and cat. I would say YES to this book and like they say the earlier the better. ALSO it's never to late.It also mentioned they started older brain injured children. It never hurts to try with the teaching because even if they learn a small amount with autism, it's better than none. Anyway as they get older you never know what door could open meaning more. That goes for any child.

I don’t know if I can give a full review because I didn’t complete the program so I don’t know how well it actually works. I knew nothing about this program when I bought this book. I was just interested in teaching my 2 year old to read. I liked the book it made sense to me which is why I give 4 stars. What I wasn’t prepared for was how much would be required of me to complete the process. Be prepared to buy LOTS of poster board. It requires you to cut the poster board into hundreds of strips and you show words written on them to your baby several times each day. You eventually progress to making your own little books out of the words you’ve taught. I like the idea but am having a hard time fitting it into my day.

The book is not supported by any scientific findings and is self-serving. The whole point is to use big flash cards as early as you can.

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Saturday, November 8, 2014

Download Ebook Feel: My Story

Download Ebook Feel: My Story

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Feel: My Story

Feel: My Story


Feel: My Story


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Feel: My Story

Review

"It's bloody brilliant . . . one of the most interesting autobiographies we've read." —Motorcycle News

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About the Author

Freddie Spencer will go down in history as one of the greatest American motorcycle road racers of all time. In addition to winning three World Championships, he is the only rider ever to win both the 250cc and 500cc/MotoGP Grand Prix World Championships in the same season (1985); the only rider to win three major races during Bike Week at Daytona International Speedway; and the youngest rider to win the 500cc/MotoGP GrandPrix World Championship, until Marc Marquez broke his record 30 years later.Spencer was born December 20,1961 in Shreveport, Louisiana, and soon became a racing prodigy, learning to ride at the age of four and entering his first races at five. By the time he was eleven, Spencer had already won numerous state and regional dirt track racing championships in Texas and Louisiana. As a teen, Spencer began concentrating on road racing and continued winning by earning national amateur and professional road racing championships.Spencer retired from full-time GP racing in 1988, but made a couple of comebacks in the next few years. He went on to win three more US Superbike nationals, including his memorable final AMA national victory on a rain-soaked Laguna Seca Raceway in 1995, and officially retired later that year.After his racing career was over, Spencer founded a successful motorcycle riding school and businesses in Las Vegas in 1997. He also served as an expert analyst for the SpeedChannel TV network for 12 years to cover motorcycle races until 2008.Then both his professional and personal lives changed dramatically as he began the personal journey of philosophical self-exploration, travelling the world and sharing his experiences with others. Now he can share the story he was always supposed to tell.

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Product details

Hardcover: 320 pages

Publisher: Virgin Books (April 20, 2017)

Language: English

ISBN-10: 0753545616

ISBN-13: 978-0753545614

Product Dimensions:

6.5 x 1.2 x 9.5 inches

Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)

Average Customer Review:

4.4 out of 5 stars

18 customer reviews

Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#184,704 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Very deep, insightful book. I might even say soulful. Much much more than your typical racer bio, and I loved it. It was difficult to get much information about Spencer because he was a bit reclusive and private. The book also documents that a person, if he or she is willing and is also ready to listen, is continually learning in life, and that miracles really do happen. Some people may argue that these details aren't necessary, but I felt that it really gave me a better idea of Freddie Spencer, the person.Loved the fact that Freddie paid a lot of attention to the spellbinding 1983 season when he battled Kenny Roberts for the 500GP crown in Kenny's last 500 campaign.Back in 1983, racetracks were much more dangerous than today, though racers still die in today's safer environment. Having said that, "The Pass" in Anderstorp Sweden is what it is, and glad that both men are still here to argue about it.Tell the truth, I was very much a Roberts supporter and still am, but have gained respect for Freddie Spencer over the years, and even more so after reading this book.Wishing Fast Freddie well in whatever he chooses to do in life, glad he's made a semblance of peace with KR, and thank you for writing this beautiful memoir.

Not at all what I expected. This book goes way past just his racing career. I was lucky to have been on the track with him when he was with two brothers in louden. I was able to see him first hand slide the front end and use the rear to help steer the bike. No other rider I had ever seen showed the feel he had for a machine. I had talked with him briefly coming out of the bathroom as he was heading for the race. I was amazed at how calm he was. It was at that point I became a fan. Reading this book gave me such a better understanding of how he got to that point and the struggles no one ever knew about. So much more than just racing. Thank you Freddy for this incredible book.

I have read many books that were written by people who have been involved in motorcycle racing. This one is the best. I was interested in this book after listening to Freddie speak on Motorsport Magazine's podcasts. He tells a very personal story about his life as a whole, the ups and downs. It is put together very well with his career in racing as the main part of it, but much more. This is an uncommonly good book.

There is no doubting Freddie Spencer is a legend on two wheels as well as a decent and interesting guy, but this book doesn't do him or his life justice. It's not the story itself that's the problem but the editing of the book that makes it a hard read. Don't get me wrong, there are plenty of interesting bits, from riding stories to formative personal and family events, but the book is fragmented in its presentation and lacks continuity. If you're a Freddie fan it still might be worth it for the information it contains, but someone should slap the editors for not giving this book the flow and "feel" it deserves.

I have a small case filled with racers life stories, and 'Feel' is one of the best. A long time fan of Freddie Spencer and this covers it all for me. Great race descriptions and history. Also, a very introspective book, which gave some insights that I can use in my life. I did come across one typo/wrong info in it when it was written about Road Atlanta course at Elkhart Lake and that should read Road America ( our favorite course ), Road Atlanta was even talked about on the next page. But, this is nitpicking on a wonderful book. Thanks to Freddie for sharing this story.

I've been a race fan for decades and always felt that Freddie Spencer was enigmatic at best. I haven't finished it yet, but I'm really enjoying his perspective especially on the 1983 season. Looking forward to learning more about his state of mind near the end of his career and during the various comebacks. The story is every bit as much about putting his whole life together as it is about his racing.

Freddie Spencer is an icon in the motorcycle universe. He is also a hero of mine. The fantastic book only reinforced this (spoiler alert: turns out Freddie is human). Great read. Couldn't put it down.

I thoroughly enjoyed Freddie's story and the book tells it well. I did not like the inconclusive ending but a must read. Fast Freddie was one of the greatest in amongst the likes of Sheen, Roberts, Lawson, and the many other greats.

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Feel: My Story PDF

Feel: My Story PDF

Feel: My Story PDF
Feel: My Story PDF