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{{Short description|Private school in Toronto, Canada}} | ||
{{Infobox school | |||
|image=] | |||
|name = Arrowsmith School | | name = Arrowsmith School | ||
| image = Arrowsmith School Logo.svg | |||
|streetaddress = 245 St. Clair Avenue West | |||
| caption = | |||
|city = ] | |||
| motto = Strengthen Your Brain. Be At Your Best. | |||
|province = ] | |||
| address = 245 St. Clair Avenue West | |||
|country = ] | |||
| city = ] | |||
|postalcode = M4V 1R3 | |||
| county = Toronto | |||
|coordinates = {{coord|43.6856|N|79.4056|W|region:CA-ON_type:edu|display=inline, title}} | |||
| province = ] | |||
|homepage = {{URL|http://www.arrowsmithschool.org/}} | |||
| postcode = ] | |||
|principal = Barbara Arrowsmith Young | |||
| country = ] | |||
|affiliation = None | |||
| coordinates = {{coord|43.6856|N|79.4056|W|region:CA-ON|display=inline,title}} | |||
|fundingtype = Private | |||
|schooltype = ] ] ] | | schooltype = ] ] for children with ] | ||
| fundingtype = ] | |||
|grades = | |||
| founded = {{Start date|1980}} | |||
|language = ] | |||
| principal = ] | |||
|founded = {{Start date|1980}} | |||
| grades_label = ] | |||
|enrollment = <!-- number of students --> | |||
| grades = 1 – 12 | |||
|enrollment_as_of = <!-- Year or Month Year or Month Day Year --> | |||
| language = ] | |||
| homepage = {{URL|https://school.arrowsmith.ca/}} | |||
}} | }} | ||
The '''Arrowsmith School''' is a ] in ] |
The '''Arrowsmith School''' is a ] in ], ], for children in ] to ] with ] (also referred to as "specific learning difficulties").<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.bdadyslexia.org.uk/about-dyslexia/schools-colleges-and-universities/what-are-specific-learning-difficulties.html|title=What are Specific Learning Difficulties: About Dyslexia|publisher=British Dyslexia Association|access-date=2014-04-22|archive-date=2014-04-14|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140414125522/http://www.bdadyslexia.org.uk/about-dyslexia/schools-colleges-and-universities/what-are-specific-learning-difficulties.html|url-status=dead}}</ref> The original Arrowsmith School was founded in Toronto in 1980 by ]. A second location was opened in May 2005 in ], Ontario. The Eaton Arrowsmith School, which is modelled on the Toronto school and founded by Howard Eaton, was opened in 2005 in ], ] with two further branches established in Canada and one in the United States between 2009 and 2014. | ||
The school's methodology, known as the '''Arrowsmith Program''', was founded by Arrowsmith Young in 1978 from exercises that she had begun devising for herself in 1977 and which she has stated enabled her to overcome her own severe learning difficulties. Her own struggle with learning disability and the rationale for her program are described in her 2012 book ''The Woman Who Changed Her Brain''. According to Arrowsmith Young, her methodology is based on research into the principle of ], which suggests that the brain is dynamic and constantly rewiring itself.<ref name = "BAY" /> The program has been incorporated into other public and private schools in Canada, the United States, Australia, and New Zealand,<ref name = "ASParticipating" /> but has drawn skepticism and criticism from several ]s and ].<ref name = "Barmak1">Barmak, Sarah (25 January 2013). . '']''. Retrieved 4 June 2015.</ref> | |||
The school's philosophy and methods, called the ''Arrowsmith Program'', have been incorporated in other public and private schools in ], the ], ], and ].<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.arrowsmithschool.org/schools.htm |title= Schools That Offer the Arrowsmith Program|publisher= Arrowsmith School|accessdate= 2011-09-01| archiveurl= http://web.archive.org/web/20110725014259/http://www.arrowsmithschool.org/schools.htm| archivedate= 25 July 2011 <!--DASHBot-->| deadurl= no}}</ref> | |||
==History== | |||
Founded by Barbara Arrowsmith Young in 1978, the Arrowsmith Program helps students with ] by using research in ] theories, which suggest that the brain is dynamic and constantly rewiring itself. It is also founded on Ms. Arrowsmith Young’s personal experience of living with learning disabilities. In her late 20s, she had logical and verbal impairments that were so severe she couldn’t tell time by reading a clock – a struggle detailed in her recent book ''The Woman Who Changed Her Brain''''.''<ref>http://books.google.ca/books?id=9Yj02tbcP1wC&printsec=frontcover&dq=the+woman+who+changed+her+brain&hl=en&sa=X&ei=MdKxU7iKB8yuyATIjoCgCg&ved=0CCYQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q&f=false</ref> | |||
] and her then-husband, Joshua Cohen founded the original Toronto school in 1980 to teach learning disabled children using the program and exercises that Arrowsmith Young had begun devising for herself in 1978 and which she claimed enabled her to overcome her own severe learning difficulties.<ref name = "Doidge">] (2008). , ''The Brain That Changes Itself: Stories of Personal Triumph from the Frontiers of Brain Science''. Penguin. {{ISBN|9780141038872}}</ref> The original school was housed in a rented building on Yorkville Ave. According to Arrowsmith Young's autobiographical account in her 2012 book, ''The Woman Who Changed Her Brain'', she used her middle name for the school in honor of her paternal grandmother (born Louie May Arrowsmith in 1883), who as a young girl had been one of the pioneer settlers of ]. The Toronto school gradually expanded, and in 1991 she and Cohen decided to open a second school in Brooklyn, New York and wind down the Toronto school. However, by 1994 the New York school had folded, and the marriage of Arrowsmith Young and Cohen had ended. She returned to Toronto and re-opened the school there, this time in a rented building on Yonge St.<ref name = "BAY">Arrowsmith Young, Barbara (2012). . pp. 7, 16, 139, 161–162, 187–188. Simon and Schuster. {{ISBN|9781451607932}}</ref> | |||
The school eventually moved to its present location, a converted house on St. Clair Avenue in the ] neighborhood of Toronto.<ref> | |||
To help herself, Ms. Arrowsmith Young developed cognitive exercises that she claims help in stimulating the growth of ]. She now has her students – who are not only ], but include ] into their 80s – follow a similar approach.<ref>http://www.theglobeandmail.com/technology/science/brain/can-a-controversial-learning-program-transform-brains/article7871918/</ref> | |||
George, Lianne (7 November 2008). '', ]''. Retrieved 6 June 2015.</ref> Barbara Arrowsmith Young remains its director and owner as she does of a second, smaller branch in ] which opened in 2005.<ref name = "ASParticipating">ArrowsmithSchool.org. . Retrieved 6 June 2015.</ref> Both branches saw increasing numbers of students from outside Canada following Arrowsmith Young's 2012 speaking tour to New Zealand, Australia, and the United Kingdom to promote her book ''The Woman Who Changed Her Brain''. In October 2012, international students made up about a third of the student population of the Peterborough branch (seven from Australia, one student from the ], and one from the United States).<ref>McCormick, Rob (9 October 2012). {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150606155357/http://www.thepeterboroughexaminer.com/2012/10/09/global-reach-at-school-for-learning-disabled |date=2015-06-06 }}. '']''. Retrieved 6 June 2015.</ref> | |||
In 2005 Howard Eaton opened the Eaton Arrowsmith School in ] which is modelled on the Arrowsmith School in Toronto. The Eaton Arrowsmith School subsequently established further branches in ] at ] in 2009 and ] in 2012.<ref>EatonArrowsmithSchool.com. . Retrieved 6 June 2015.</ref> Eaton then established a branch in the United States at ], the Eaton Arrowsmith Academy, which opened in September 2014.<ref name = "KOMO">Shen, Molly (25 November 2014). {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141128183508/http://www.komonews.com/news/health/New-take-on-learning-disabilities-change-the-brain-283764191.html |date=2014-11-28 }}. ]. Retrieved 6 June 2015.</ref> Eaton is the owner and Director of all four Eaton Arrowsmith schools. | |||
== Barbara Arrowsmith Young == | |||
Barbara Arrowsmith Young is the Founder and Director of the Arrowsmith Program, and author of ''The Woman Who Changed Her Brain''.<ref>http://books.google.ca/books?id=9Yj02tbcP1wC&printsec=frontcover&dq=the+woman+who+changed+her+brain&hl=en&sa=X&ei=MdKxU7iKB8yuyATIjoCgCg&ved=0CCYQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q&f=false</ref> | |||
==Curriculum and tuition fees== | |||
Diagnosed in grade one as having a mental block, which today would have been identified as multiple learning disabilities, she read and wrote everything backwards, had trouble processing concepts in language, continuously got lost and was physically uncoordinated. Barbara eventually learned to read and write from left to right and claims to have masked a number of the symptoms of her learning disabilities through heroic effort; however she continued throughout her educational career to have difficulty with specific aspects of learning.<ref>http://www.barbaraarrowsmithyoung.com/profile/</ref> | |||
Full-time day students, who form the core of the Toronto school's student body, follow a curriculum which devotes two periods of the school day to mathematics and English, the only two academic subjects taught at the school. The remainder of their time (six periods per day) is taken up with carrying out the cognitive remediation exercises known as the Arrowsmith Program.<ref name = "Barmak1" /><ref>Arrowsmithschool.org. {{Dead link|date=July 2022 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}. Retrieved 8 June 2015.</ref> | |||
The school had 75 students (in ] to ]) enrolled in the full-time day program in 2009. It also runs part-time programs for both children and adults. The school's annual tuition fees for full-time day students is ]30,000.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://arrowsmithschool.org/tuition-assessment-fees/ | title=Tuition & Assessment Fees }}</ref> | |||
Barbara Arrowsmith Young holds both a ]. in Child Studies from the ], and a Master’s degree in School Psychology from the ] O.I.S.E. (]). | |||
==Arrowsmith Program == | |||
In graduate school she came across two lines of research that intrigued her. ]’s description of specific brain function lead her to a clearer understanding of her own learning problems and the work of ] suggested the possibility of improving brain function through specific stimulation, at least in animals. This lead to the creation of her first cognitive exercise designed to improve the learning capacity involved in logical reasoning. The results were positive with gains in verbal reasoning, mathematical reasoning and conceptual understanding. This lead to a further exploration of the nature of specific learning capacities and to creating exercises to strengthen them. | |||
] | |||
The '''Arrowsmith Program''' (a ]) refers to the Arrowsmith School's methodology which is also available under license to students in some public and ] in Canada, the United States, Australia and New Zealand.<ref>ArrowsmithSchool.org. . Retrieved 9 June 2015.</ref> Collectively more than 65 schools in these four countries use the program.<ref>ArrowsmithSchool.org. . Retrieved 6 June 2015.</ref> According to the Arrowsmith School's official website, the program can be used by children and adults with learning disabilities such as ], ] and ] who have at least average ], but it is not suitable for people who have an ] or an acquired brain injury.<ref>ArrowsmithSchool.org. . Retrieved 6 June 2015.</ref> | |||
===History and methodology=== | |||
== The Arrowsmith Program == | |||
The program was founded by Barbara Arrowsmith Young while she was a graduate student at the ]. As a child she had exceptional ] and ], but it was coupled with several severe deficits in other areas, including ], ], and problems with ], ], and ]. In 1977–1978 she developed a series of remedial exercises which she says helped her to overcome her own disabilities rather than merely compensate for them. According to Arrowsmith Young, she based the program on ]'s work on ] and on the work of ] and his theories about the relationship between the neurodynamic processes in different functional systems of the brain.<ref name = "BAY" /><ref name = "Doidge" /> | |||
Arrowsmith Program refers to the Arrowsmith school's ] that is made available to students in public and ] in ], the ], ] and ].<ref>http://www.arrowsmithschool.org/arrowsmithprogram/participating-schools.html</ref> | |||
In their 2015 audit of 15 remedial programs for specific learning difficulties for the New Zealand organization SPELD,{{efn|SPELD is a private non-profit organisation supporting children with specific learning disabilities in New Zealand.<ref>Brooking, Keren (March 2010). {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150613151229/http://www.educationreview.co.nz/magazine/june-2010/outside-the-mainstream/ |date=2015-06-13 }}. ''Education Review''. Retrieved 8 June 2015.</ref> Dawson and D'Souza's audit was supervised by David Moreau (Research Fellow) and ] (Associate Professor) at the Centre for Brain Research and School of Psychology, ].<ref name = "Speld" />}} George Dawson and Stephanie D'Souza gave basic descriptions of the nineteen areas of cognitive processing which the Arrowsmith Program is intended to improve as well as descriptions of some of its remediation exercises. In their introduction Dawson and D'Souza stated that the Arrowsmith Program is licensed on a for-profit payment basis with detailed descriptions of its exercises not publicly available and that their descriptions were based on Arrowsmith Young's own account in ''The Woman Who Changed Her Brain''.<ref name = "Speld">Dawson, George and D'Souza, Stephanie (23 March 2015). {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150614073416/http://www.speld.org.nz/downloads/Report%20on%20behavioural%20interventions.pdf |date=2015-06-14 }}. Speld.org.nz.</ref> | |||
Founded by Barbara Arrowsmith Young in 1978, the Arrowsmith Program helps students with learning disabilities by using the research in neuroplasticity theories, which suggest the brain is dynamic, and constantly rewiring itself. It is also founded on Ms. Arrowsmith Young’s personal experience in living with learning disabilities. | |||
The deficit areas for which Dawson and D'Souza were able to provide basic descriptions of the Arrowsmith remedial exercises included: | |||
The Arrowsmith Program is founded on two lines of research, one of which established that different areas of the brain working together are responsible for complex mental activities, such as reading or writing, and that a weakness in one area can affect a number of different learning processes. | |||
*'''Motor symbol sequencing''' The remedial exercise involves tracing using pen and paper while the student's left eye is covered. According to Arrowsmith Young's description of the program, this is intended to stimulate the left hemisphere ] and thus improve tracking while reading and improve the ability to use "binocular vision cues".<ref name = "Speld" /> | |||
*'''Symbol relations''' The remedial exercise involves reading analog clocks with multiple hands displayed on a computer. The exercise has fourteen different rules. According to Arrowsmith Young, this exercise targets problems at the juncture of the ], ], and ]s areas on the left side of the brain which can produce a tendency to reverse the sequence of letters in a word and make it difficult to parse ] and read an ].<ref name = "Speld" /> | |||
*'''Memory for information or instructions''' The remedial exercise involves memorizing increasingly more complicated song lyrics by listening to them as many times as it takes to be able to repeat them accurately. According to Arrowsmith Young, this exercise targets the left hemisphere temporal lobe where a deficit manifests itself in an inability to remember accurately conversations, lectures, and instructions.<ref name = "Speld" /> | |||
*'''Symbol recognition''' The remedial exercise involves remembering increasingly long strings of computer-presented letters from languages with a different ] from English, e.g., ], ], etc.. According to Arrowsmith Young, this exercise targets deficits located in the occiptital-temporal area which cause difficulty in learning to read and spell.<ref name = "Speld" /> | |||
*'''Artifactual thinking (R-Think)''' The remedial exercise involves looking a narrative picture and then forming a reasonable hypothesis of what story is being depicted. According to Arrowsmith Young, this exercise targets a deficit located in the right prefrontal cortex which cause difficulty in interpreting the emotions of others.<ref name = "Speld" /> | |||
In their report, Dawson and D'Souza describe the remediation exercises for nine out of the nineteen areas as "vague", "not clear" or unspecified in Arrowsmith Young's book.<ref name = "Speld" /> These include: | |||
The other line of research investigated the principle of neuroplasticity, which is the ability of the brain to physically change in response to stimulus and activity, to develop new neuronal/synaptic interconnections and thereby develop and adapt new functions and roles believed to be the physical mechanism of learning. Neuroplasticity refers to structural and functional changes in the brain that are brought about by training and experience. | |||
*'''Broca's speech pronunciation''' According to Arrowsmith Young, this deficit located ] of the brain, causes mispronunciation, restricted vocabulary, and difficulty in simultaneously speaking and thinking.<ref name = "Speld" /> | |||
*'''Auditory speech discrimination''' According to Arrowsmith Young, this deficit involving the superior temporal lobe, reduces the capacity to distinguish words that rhyme, e.g., ''fear'' and ''hear''.<ref name = "Speld" /> | |||
*'''Symbolic thinking''' According to Arrowsmith Young, this deficit involving the ] causes a short attention span and reduces capacity for "mental initiative".<ref name = "Speld" /> | |||
*'''Kinaesthetic perception''' According to Arrowsmith Young, this deficit involves the ] area of the parietal lobe which causes clumsiness (a tendency to bump into things) and may adversely affect handwriting.<ref name = "Speld" /> | |||
At the conclusion of the audit Dawson and D'Souza noted that evidence for the program's efficacy is documented via testimonials from some of the students and their parents and in several research reports, although none have been published in peer-reviewed academic journals. In the authors' opinion: | |||
==Skepticism and criticism== | |||
{{blockquote|The Arrowsmith programme claims to be founded on neuroscience research. This is true in the sense that Arrowsmith Young continually refers back to localisation of (dys)function as described by Luria when describing the development of her cognitive exercises. However, it is not the case that (present) neuroscience research actually supports the use of Arrowsmith's particular exercises to remediate learning disabilities.<ref name = "Speld" />}} | |||
A lot of doubt and criticism has emerged, including from psychologists, neurologists and learning experts, on the credibility of the Arrowsmith program; especially given the lack of evidence of change in learning skills as well as the extremely high costs. | |||
===Skepticism, evaluation and criticism=== | |||
Professor Anne Castles is deputy director of the ARC Centre of Excellence in Cognition and its Disorders at ], Australia.<ref>http://www.ldaustralia.org/lda-council-2013-2014.html</ref> Castles has stated in an article in the Learning Difficulties Australia Bulletin, an organization she is a council member of, that there is ''"a clear lack of independent research to support the program's claims"'', and no study has been published in a peer-reviewed journal on the Arrowsmith program.<ref>http://www.theage.com.au/national/education/experts-question-arrowsmith-learning-program-20121103-28qcc.html</ref> | |||
], a Canadian ] and ] devoted one of the chapters in his 2008 book '']'' to Barbara Arrowsmith Young and the Arrowsmith Program. In it he recounts Arrowsmith Young's own struggle to overcome her learning disabilities and how she developed the program. The chapter also includes several brief case histories of children and adults who Doidge says were significantly helped by the program, although no quantifiable data is presented.<ref>Clark, Elaine and Pompa, Janiece L. (2011). . ''The Oxford Handbook of School Psychology'', pp. 183–184. Oxford University Press. {{ISBN|0195369807}}</ref> He described her approach as "an important discovery" and one that had "major implications for education".<ref name = "Doidge" /> However, as Doidge also acknowledged in the chapter, the Arrowsmith Program has been controversial. Widespread doubt and criticism has emerged from several psychologists, neuroscientists and learning experts. This has centered on the lack of scientific evidence used by the program to demonstrate its efficacy and on its underlying rationale which its critics say represents an ] and misapplication of neuroscientific concepts.<ref name = "Barmak1" /> | |||
Coinciding with Barbara Arrowsmith Young's speaking tour of Australia in 2012, the Catholic Education Office in ] announced that it would begin a pilot study involving 20 learning disabled students in their last two years of high school who would be offered the Arrowsmith Program for two years beginning in 2013. If it proved successful, the program would be extended to thousands of children in Catholic schools, including those in younger grades. The cost to parents whose children had been selected for the pilot study would be ]8000 for two years, over and above the normal school fees.<ref name="Han1">Han, Esther (15 May 2012). . ''].'' Retrieved 9 June 2015.</ref> Several Australian academics were critical of the move. Dr ], a neuroscientist at the ] in Melbourne, and cognitive scientists ] and ] at ] pointed out that the "evidence" supporting the program's claims of success was ] rather than based on studies using ]s and published in peer-reviewed academic journals.<ref name="Han1" /><ref>'']'' (11 May 2012). . Retrieved 4 June 2015.</ref><ref>Tarica, Elisabeth (18 June 2012). . '']''. Retrieved 4 June 2015.</ref> Both Castles and Coltheart have also criticised the Arrowsmith Program and other ] programs such the ] and ] as based on an oversimplification of ] and other neuroscientific concepts.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.smh.com.au/good-weekend/can-barbara-arrowsmithyoungs-cognitive-exercises-change-your-brain-20170419-gvnsn5.html|title=Can Barbara Arrowsmith-Young's cognitive exercises change your brain?|work=Amanda Hooton|date=21 April 2017 |publisher=Good Weekend}}</ref><ref>Castles, Anne and McArthur, Genevieve (April 2013). . ''Learning Difficulties Australia Bulletin'', Vol. 45, No 1. Retrieved 4 June 2015.</ref><ref>Coltheart, Max (March 2014). {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180406222445/https://speldnsw.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/Neuromths-by-Prof.-Max-Coltheart.pdf |date=2018-04-06 }}. ''SPELD NSW Newsletter''. Retrieved 4 June 2015.</ref> | |||
In a separate commentary co-written with Genevieve McArthur, Associate Professor at the Department of Cognitive Science at Macquarie University, Castles gives her analysis of why she is not in favor of the Arrowsmith program.<ref>https://theconversation.com/brain-training-or-learning-as-we-like-to-call-it-9951</ref> | |||
According to a January 2015 announcement from the ], the two-year school trial in Sydney had "outstanding results". The Arrowsmith Program was incorporated into the Sydney Catholic School system in 2015 and expanded to include both ] and ] students. The data on which the evaluation was based were not provided in the announcement.<ref>''Archdiocese of Sydney'' (12 Jan 2015). . Retrieved 9 June 2015.</ref> The trial itself was strongly criticized by neuroscientists as misguiding. They contend the Arrowsmith school's claims of being research-based are unfounded. Dr Burrows was further reported to have expressed concern after directly inquiring with Barbara Arrowsmith for evidence and learning that neuroscientists were not involved with the Arrowsmith Program.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/proof-hurdle-for-brain-training-20121215-2bgaz.html|title=Proof hurdle for 'brain training'|work=Esther Han|date=15 December 2012 |publisher=The Sydney Morning Herald}}</ref> | |||
Neuroscientists in Australia have criticized the Arrowsmith program where trials were being conducted to incorporate the program into local Catholic schools. They contend that the Arrowsmith school's claims of being research based are unfounded. It was further reported that Dr Emma Burrows, a neuroscientist from the Florey Institute in Melbourne, directly confronted Barbara Arrowsmith on whether neuroscientists were involved in researching her program and its methods and the answer she got was that they were not involved.<ref>http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/proof-hurdle-for-brain-training-20121215-2bgaz.html</ref> | |||
In Canada, neuroscientist ] and cognitive psychologist ]—both based at the ] in Vancouver—have expressed concerns similar to those of Castles and Coltheart.<ref name = "Barmak1" /><ref>Wickelgren, Ingrid (May/June 2013). {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150614173338/http://projects.ecfs.org/pchurch/ATBiology/Papers2012/WhyWeCheat.pdf |date=June 14, 2015 }}. '']'', pp. 39–45</ref> Both appeared in the 2008 a ] documentary about the Arrowsmith program. ''Fixing My Brain'' which was filmed at the Arrowsmith School in Toronto. A portion of Siegel's highly critical commentary was removed by the documentary's producers prior to broadcast after Arrowsmith Young's lawyers threatened the CBC with a lawsuit for libel.<ref name="MFHill">Hill, M. F. (29 December 2008). . '']''. Retrieved 31 May 2015.</ref>{{efn|According to the film's producer, two sentences from Siegel were removed: "I think the Arrowsmith Program is a fraud. I think they're taking money from people and not showing any improvement in any kind of any objective way." The remainder of her commentary was left intact.<ref name = "MFHill" />}} Siegel was also the author of a 2003 report to the ] (VSB) on the efficacy of The Arrowsmith program. At the time, VSB was running a three-year trial of the program, funded in part by the ]. According to Howard Eaton, the owner and Director of the Eaton Arrowsmith schools, Siegel's report had been influential in the VSB's decision to discontinue the pilot program.<ref name = "HEaton">Eaton, Howard (2013). {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141203144154/http://www.eatonarrowsmithschool.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/Eaton-Review-of-Siegel-2003-Arrowsmith-Program-Evaluation.pdf |date=2014-12-03 }}. EatonArrowsmithSchool.com. Retrieved 9 June 2015.</ref> | |||
Emeritus Professor Max Coltheart, from the department of Cognitive Science at Macquarie University, explains that there is no ] evidence to support the program's credibility.<ref>http://theconversation.com/weird-neuroscience-how-education-hijacked-brain-research-10663</ref> Professor Coltheart advises against such programs and stresses the need for scientific evidence to support their beneficial claims.<ref>http://www.smh.com.au/national/education/brain-program-heads-this-way-20120617-20htb.html</ref> | |||
Siegel's study compared the outcomes after eight months for children with learning disabilities at two Vancouver elementary schools. In one school the children received the Arrowsmith Program. In the other, the children were enrolled in an Extended Learning Assistance Class (ELAC) which focused on reading and writing. Siegel found that the superior performance of the Arrowsmith children on the comprehension and spelling measures was ]. However, she found no statistically significant differences on the other measures, although she stated that on those measures "ELAC performed at higher levels than Arrowsmith, often by a relatively large amount".{{efn|Quoted in Eaton, Howard (2013). "Siegel's Study: Points For Comment".<ref name = "HEaton" />}} Howard Eaton has stated that there were multiple problems with the design, sampling, and statistical analysis in Siegel's study, something which Siegel has also conceded.<ref>Manning, Rob (15 January 2014). . ]. Retrieved 9 June 2015.</ref> In 2013 Eaton co-authored a re-analysis of Siegel's data with professors William Lancee and Darren Irwin.{{efn|William Lancee is head of psychiatry research at Toronto's ] and has also authored evaluations of the Arrowsmith Program for the Toronto Catholic District School.<ref name = "Gordon">Gordon, Andrea (25 February 2009). . '']''. Retrieved 8 June 2015.</ref><ref>Arrowsmithschool.org. . Retrieved 8 June 2015.</ref> Darren Irwin is a professor in the Department of Zoology at the ].<ref>], Zoology Department. . Retrieved 9 June 2015.</ref>}} Their conclusion was that the higher performance of the ELAC students in Siegel's study was not statistically significant.<ref name = "HEaton" /> | |||
Though Arrowsmith has cited a number of studies that support its claims, Dr Linda Siegel, a Professor at the ] in Educational and Counseling Psychology and Special Education, has repeatedly criticized these studies. Siegel asserts that none of these studies, including the two published on the Arrowsmith school's website, provide any scientific evidence in favor of their program, nor do all the testimonials live up to its claims.<ref>http://newsstore.fairfax.com.au/apps/viewDocument.ac;jsessionid=F0E32C8DE94AD4925945F61F5307E241?sy=afr&pb=all_ffx&dt=selectRange&dr=1month&so=relevance&sf=text&sf=headline&rc=10&rm=200&sp=brs&cls=18915&clsPage=1&docID=SMH121105DQ3MD3DFVRD</ref> | |||
In 2003 the ] (VSB) received an 8 month Arrowsmith Program Evaluation Report from Linda Siegel.<ref>http://ecps.educ.ubc.ca/person/linda-siegel/</ref> Two programs for elementary students with learning disabilities were to be compared over a three year period. | |||
The Arrowsmith Program and an Extended Learning Assistance Class (ELAC) which focused on reading and writing were to be compared on measures of students’ cognitive ability and academic achievement. The Arrowsmith Program was to be piloted for three years (the average length of time it takes to complete the program) and the VSB received funding through the ]. | |||
After the first eight months of the pilot, tests of cognitive ability and academic achievement were given to all students involved in the study and an evaluation was written by Siegel (only achievement measures were reported). Siegel stated in her conclusion of her 8 month evaluation that, ''“On all but the comprehension and spelling measures, ELAC performed at higher levels than Arrowsmith, often by a relatively large amount.”'' However, results from a review of Siegel’s data by Howard Eaton, founder of the Eaton Arrowsmith school, indicate her statements regarding the ELAC group are incorrect and do a disservice to those who could benefit from the Arrowsmith Program. | |||
In his paper, ''Siegel’s Study: Points For Comment, '' Howard Eaton argues that there are a variety of serious methodological, calculation, and statistical problems associated with the Siegel evaluation, and even with those problems there was no statistical support for the above conclusion. Analysis by two independent statisticians, one at the ] and one at the ], shows that the only statistically significant findings supported by the test scores presented in Siegel’s evaluation are that the Arrowsmith students showed | |||
greater gains in Comprehension and Spelling subtest measures as compared to the ELAC group. No subtests showed statistical significance in favor of the ELAC group. | |||
The Arrowsmith Program was discontinued at the VSB and Siegel’s eight month evaluation was noted as being influential in this decision. Additionally, Eaton claims that Siegel’s study has been cited by Siegel herself, media and professionals involved in education as evidence against the effectiveness of the Arrowsmith Program.<ref>http://www.eatonarrowsmithschool.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/Eaton-Review-of-Siegel-2003-Arrowsmith-Program-Evaluation.pdf</ref> | |||
In 2008 a ] documentary about the Arrowsmith program included interviews from various people including Dr Linda Siegel, whose criticisms were later edited out of the documentary after Arrowsmith's lawyers issued a libel notice to the CBC. This nearly led to a legal stand off between Arrowsmith and Seigel.<ref>http://blogs.vancouversun.com/2008/12/29/legal-clash-over-arrowsmith-documentary/</ref><ref>http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/news/westcoastnews/story.html?id=a4b7618a-9eaf-4fbe-9dca-1e5e80290369</ref> | |||
According to the Department of Special Needs Education at the ] in ], research and studies reveal that 'brain training' programs do not show any serious effectiveness in memory and other cognitive difficulties.<ref>http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22612437</ref> | |||
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | *] | ||
*] | *] | ||
==Notes== | |||
{{notelist}} | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{reflist}} | {{reflist|30em}} | ||
==Further reading== | |||
*Alferink, Larry A. and Farmer-Dougan, Valeri (2010). . ''Exceptionality'', Vol. 18, pp. 42–52 | |||
*McArthur, Genevieve and Castles, Anne (April 2013). ,''Learning Difficulties Australia'', Vol. 45, No 1 | |||
*Coltheart, Max (10 December 2012). retrieved from '']''. | |||
*Doidge, Norman (28 February 2001). . '']'' (reprinted with permission on SocietyForQualityEducation.org) | |||
*Melby-Lervåg, M. and, Hulme, C. (February 2013). . ''Developmental Psychology'', Vol. 49, No. 2, pp. 270–291 from the ] in ]. | |||
*Coltheart, Max "" . As published in the SPELD NSW Newsletter, March 2014 | |||
*{{cite web|url=https://scholarworks.gsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?referer=https://www.ecosia.org/&httpsredir=1&article=1137&context=eps_diss|work=Hawkins, Ronda|title=A Comprehensive Examination of the Arrowsmith Program at One Private School in Atlanta|publisher=Department of educational policy studies, ]. May 15th, 2015}} | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
*{{Official website|http://www.arrowsmithschool.org/}} | *{{Official website|http://www.arrowsmithschool.org/}} | ||
{{Brain training programs}} | |||
* Profile By OurKids.net: Canada's Private School Guide | |||
{{Toronto High Schools}} | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* by Professor Max Coltheart | |||
* by Larry A. Alferink and Valeri Farmer-Dougan of llinois State University | |||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
] | |||
] | |||
] |
Latest revision as of 23:08, 11 September 2024
Private school in Toronto, CanadaArrowsmith School | |
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Address | |
245 St. Clair Avenue West Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, M4V 1R3 Canada | |
Coordinates | 43°41′08″N 79°24′20″W / 43.6856°N 79.4056°W / 43.6856; -79.4056 |
Information | |
School type | Private, Co-educational day school for children with specific learning disabilities |
Motto | Strengthen Your Brain. Be At Your Best. |
Founded | 1980 (1980) |
Principal | Shelley Woon |
Grades | 1 – 12 |
Language | English |
Website | school |
The Arrowsmith School is a private school in Toronto, Ontario, for children in Grades 1 to 12 with learning disabilities (also referred to as "specific learning difficulties"). The original Arrowsmith School was founded in Toronto in 1980 by Barbara Arrowsmith Young. A second location was opened in May 2005 in Peterborough, Ontario. The Eaton Arrowsmith School, which is modelled on the Toronto school and founded by Howard Eaton, was opened in 2005 in Vancouver, British Columbia with two further branches established in Canada and one in the United States between 2009 and 2014.
The school's methodology, known as the Arrowsmith Program, was founded by Arrowsmith Young in 1978 from exercises that she had begun devising for herself in 1977 and which she has stated enabled her to overcome her own severe learning difficulties. Her own struggle with learning disability and the rationale for her program are described in her 2012 book The Woman Who Changed Her Brain. According to Arrowsmith Young, her methodology is based on research into the principle of neuroplasticity, which suggests that the brain is dynamic and constantly rewiring itself. The program has been incorporated into other public and private schools in Canada, the United States, Australia, and New Zealand, but has drawn skepticism and criticism from several cognitive psychologists and neuroscientists.
History
Barbara Arrowsmith Young and her then-husband, Joshua Cohen founded the original Toronto school in 1980 to teach learning disabled children using the program and exercises that Arrowsmith Young had begun devising for herself in 1978 and which she claimed enabled her to overcome her own severe learning difficulties. The original school was housed in a rented building on Yorkville Ave. According to Arrowsmith Young's autobiographical account in her 2012 book, The Woman Who Changed Her Brain, she used her middle name for the school in honor of her paternal grandmother (born Louie May Arrowsmith in 1883), who as a young girl had been one of the pioneer settlers of Creston, British Columbia. The Toronto school gradually expanded, and in 1991 she and Cohen decided to open a second school in Brooklyn, New York and wind down the Toronto school. However, by 1994 the New York school had folded, and the marriage of Arrowsmith Young and Cohen had ended. She returned to Toronto and re-opened the school there, this time in a rented building on Yonge St.
The school eventually moved to its present location, a converted house on St. Clair Avenue in the Forest Hill neighborhood of Toronto. Barbara Arrowsmith Young remains its director and owner as she does of a second, smaller branch in Peterborough, Ontario which opened in 2005. Both branches saw increasing numbers of students from outside Canada following Arrowsmith Young's 2012 speaking tour to New Zealand, Australia, and the United Kingdom to promote her book The Woman Who Changed Her Brain. In October 2012, international students made up about a third of the student population of the Peterborough branch (seven from Australia, one student from the United Arab Emirates, and one from the United States).
In 2005 Howard Eaton opened the Eaton Arrowsmith School in Vancouver which is modelled on the Arrowsmith School in Toronto. The Eaton Arrowsmith School subsequently established further branches in British Columbia at Victoria in 2009 and White Rock in 2012. Eaton then established a branch in the United States at Redmond, Washington, the Eaton Arrowsmith Academy, which opened in September 2014. Eaton is the owner and Director of all four Eaton Arrowsmith schools.
Curriculum and tuition fees
Full-time day students, who form the core of the Toronto school's student body, follow a curriculum which devotes two periods of the school day to mathematics and English, the only two academic subjects taught at the school. The remainder of their time (six periods per day) is taken up with carrying out the cognitive remediation exercises known as the Arrowsmith Program.
The school had 75 students (in Grades 1 to 12) enrolled in the full-time day program in 2009. It also runs part-time programs for both children and adults. The school's annual tuition fees for full-time day students is $30,000.
Arrowsmith Program
The Arrowsmith Program (a registered trademark) refers to the Arrowsmith School's methodology which is also available under license to students in some public and private schools in Canada, the United States, Australia and New Zealand. Collectively more than 65 schools in these four countries use the program. According to the Arrowsmith School's official website, the program can be used by children and adults with learning disabilities such as dyslexia, dyscalculia and dysgraphia who have at least average intelligence, but it is not suitable for people who have an autism spectrum disorder or an acquired brain injury.
History and methodology
The program was founded by Barbara Arrowsmith Young while she was a graduate student at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education. As a child she had exceptional visual and auditory memory, but it was coupled with several severe deficits in other areas, including dyslexia, dyscalculia, and problems with spatial reasoning, logic, and kinesthetic perception. In 1977–1978 she developed a series of remedial exercises which she says helped her to overcome her own disabilities rather than merely compensate for them. According to Arrowsmith Young, she based the program on Mark Rosenzweig's work on neuroplasticity and on the work of Alexander Luria and his theories about the relationship between the neurodynamic processes in different functional systems of the brain.
In their 2015 audit of 15 remedial programs for specific learning difficulties for the New Zealand organization SPELD, George Dawson and Stephanie D'Souza gave basic descriptions of the nineteen areas of cognitive processing which the Arrowsmith Program is intended to improve as well as descriptions of some of its remediation exercises. In their introduction Dawson and D'Souza stated that the Arrowsmith Program is licensed on a for-profit payment basis with detailed descriptions of its exercises not publicly available and that their descriptions were based on Arrowsmith Young's own account in The Woman Who Changed Her Brain.
The deficit areas for which Dawson and D'Souza were able to provide basic descriptions of the Arrowsmith remedial exercises included:
- Motor symbol sequencing The remedial exercise involves tracing using pen and paper while the student's left eye is covered. According to Arrowsmith Young's description of the program, this is intended to stimulate the left hemisphere motor cortex and thus improve tracking while reading and improve the ability to use "binocular vision cues".
- Symbol relations The remedial exercise involves reading analog clocks with multiple hands displayed on a computer. The exercise has fourteen different rules. According to Arrowsmith Young, this exercise targets problems at the juncture of the occipital, parietal, and temporal lobes areas on the left side of the brain which can produce a tendency to reverse the sequence of letters in a word and make it difficult to parse syntax and read an analog clock.
- Memory for information or instructions The remedial exercise involves memorizing increasingly more complicated song lyrics by listening to them as many times as it takes to be able to repeat them accurately. According to Arrowsmith Young, this exercise targets the left hemisphere temporal lobe where a deficit manifests itself in an inability to remember accurately conversations, lectures, and instructions.
- Symbol recognition The remedial exercise involves remembering increasingly long strings of computer-presented letters from languages with a different orthography from English, e.g., Urdu, Arabic, etc.. According to Arrowsmith Young, this exercise targets deficits located in the occiptital-temporal area which cause difficulty in learning to read and spell.
- Artifactual thinking (R-Think) The remedial exercise involves looking a narrative picture and then forming a reasonable hypothesis of what story is being depicted. According to Arrowsmith Young, this exercise targets a deficit located in the right prefrontal cortex which cause difficulty in interpreting the emotions of others.
In their report, Dawson and D'Souza describe the remediation exercises for nine out of the nineteen areas as "vague", "not clear" or unspecified in Arrowsmith Young's book. These include:
- Broca's speech pronunciation According to Arrowsmith Young, this deficit located Broca's area of the brain, causes mispronunciation, restricted vocabulary, and difficulty in simultaneously speaking and thinking.
- Auditory speech discrimination According to Arrowsmith Young, this deficit involving the superior temporal lobe, reduces the capacity to distinguish words that rhyme, e.g., fear and hear.
- Symbolic thinking According to Arrowsmith Young, this deficit involving the prefrontal cortex causes a short attention span and reduces capacity for "mental initiative".
- Kinaesthetic perception According to Arrowsmith Young, this deficit involves the somatosensory area of the parietal lobe which causes clumsiness (a tendency to bump into things) and may adversely affect handwriting.
At the conclusion of the audit Dawson and D'Souza noted that evidence for the program's efficacy is documented via testimonials from some of the students and their parents and in several research reports, although none have been published in peer-reviewed academic journals. In the authors' opinion:
The Arrowsmith programme claims to be founded on neuroscience research. This is true in the sense that Arrowsmith Young continually refers back to localisation of (dys)function as described by Luria when describing the development of her cognitive exercises. However, it is not the case that (present) neuroscience research actually supports the use of Arrowsmith's particular exercises to remediate learning disabilities.
Skepticism, evaluation and criticism
Norman Doidge, a Canadian psychiatrist and psychoanalyst devoted one of the chapters in his 2008 book The Brain That Changes Itself to Barbara Arrowsmith Young and the Arrowsmith Program. In it he recounts Arrowsmith Young's own struggle to overcome her learning disabilities and how she developed the program. The chapter also includes several brief case histories of children and adults who Doidge says were significantly helped by the program, although no quantifiable data is presented. He described her approach as "an important discovery" and one that had "major implications for education". However, as Doidge also acknowledged in the chapter, the Arrowsmith Program has been controversial. Widespread doubt and criticism has emerged from several psychologists, neuroscientists and learning experts. This has centered on the lack of scientific evidence used by the program to demonstrate its efficacy and on its underlying rationale which its critics say represents an oversimplification and misapplication of neuroscientific concepts.
Coinciding with Barbara Arrowsmith Young's speaking tour of Australia in 2012, the Catholic Education Office in Sydney announced that it would begin a pilot study involving 20 learning disabled students in their last two years of high school who would be offered the Arrowsmith Program for two years beginning in 2013. If it proved successful, the program would be extended to thousands of children in Catholic schools, including those in younger grades. The cost to parents whose children had been selected for the pilot study would be A$8000 for two years, over and above the normal school fees. Several Australian academics were critical of the move. Dr Emma Burrows, a neuroscientist at the Florey Institute in Melbourne, and cognitive scientists Anne Castles and Max Coltheart at Macquarie University pointed out that the "evidence" supporting the program's claims of success was anecdotal rather than based on studies using randomized control trials and published in peer-reviewed academic journals. Both Castles and Coltheart have also criticised the Arrowsmith Program and other "brain training" programs such the Dore Programme and Brain Gym as based on an oversimplification of neuroplasticity and other neuroscientific concepts.
According to a January 2015 announcement from the Archdiocese of Sydney, the two-year school trial in Sydney had "outstanding results". The Arrowsmith Program was incorporated into the Sydney Catholic School system in 2015 and expanded to include both primary and secondary school students. The data on which the evaluation was based were not provided in the announcement. The trial itself was strongly criticized by neuroscientists as misguiding. They contend the Arrowsmith school's claims of being research-based are unfounded. Dr Burrows was further reported to have expressed concern after directly inquiring with Barbara Arrowsmith for evidence and learning that neuroscientists were not involved with the Arrowsmith Program.
In Canada, neuroscientist Adele Diamond and cognitive psychologist Linda Siegel—both based at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver—have expressed concerns similar to those of Castles and Coltheart. Both appeared in the 2008 a CBC documentary about the Arrowsmith program. Fixing My Brain which was filmed at the Arrowsmith School in Toronto. A portion of Siegel's highly critical commentary was removed by the documentary's producers prior to broadcast after Arrowsmith Young's lawyers threatened the CBC with a lawsuit for libel. Siegel was also the author of a 2003 report to the Vancouver School Board (VSB) on the efficacy of The Arrowsmith program. At the time, VSB was running a three-year trial of the program, funded in part by the Vancouver Foundation. According to Howard Eaton, the owner and Director of the Eaton Arrowsmith schools, Siegel's report had been influential in the VSB's decision to discontinue the pilot program.
Siegel's study compared the outcomes after eight months for children with learning disabilities at two Vancouver elementary schools. In one school the children received the Arrowsmith Program. In the other, the children were enrolled in an Extended Learning Assistance Class (ELAC) which focused on reading and writing. Siegel found that the superior performance of the Arrowsmith children on the comprehension and spelling measures was statistically significant. However, she found no statistically significant differences on the other measures, although she stated that on those measures "ELAC performed at higher levels than Arrowsmith, often by a relatively large amount". Howard Eaton has stated that there were multiple problems with the design, sampling, and statistical analysis in Siegel's study, something which Siegel has also conceded. In 2013 Eaton co-authored a re-analysis of Siegel's data with professors William Lancee and Darren Irwin. Their conclusion was that the higher performance of the ELAC students in Siegel's study was not statistically significant.
See also
Notes
- SPELD is a private non-profit organisation supporting children with specific learning disabilities in New Zealand. Dawson and D'Souza's audit was supervised by David Moreau (Research Fellow) and Karen Waldie (Associate Professor) at the Centre for Brain Research and School of Psychology, University of Auckland.
- According to the film's producer, two sentences from Siegel were removed: "I think the Arrowsmith Program is a fraud. I think they're taking money from people and not showing any improvement in any kind of any objective way." The remainder of her commentary was left intact.
- Quoted in Eaton, Howard (2013). "Siegel's Study: Points For Comment".
- William Lancee is head of psychiatry research at Toronto's Mount Sinai Hospital and has also authored evaluations of the Arrowsmith Program for the Toronto Catholic District School. Darren Irwin is a professor in the Department of Zoology at the University of British Columbia.
References
- "What are Specific Learning Difficulties: About Dyslexia". British Dyslexia Association. Archived from the original on 2014-04-14. Retrieved 2014-04-22.
- ^ Arrowsmith Young, Barbara (2012). The Woman Who Changed Her Brain. pp. 7, 16, 139, 161–162, 187–188. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 9781451607932
- ^ ArrowsmithSchool.org. Participating Schools: Arrowsmith School Peterborough. Retrieved 6 June 2015.
- ^ Barmak, Sarah (25 January 2013). "Can a controversial learning program transform brains?". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved 4 June 2015.
- ^ Doidge, Norman (2008). Chapter 2: "Building Herself a Better Brain", The Brain That Changes Itself: Stories of Personal Triumph from the Frontiers of Brain Science. Penguin. ISBN 9780141038872
- George, Lianne (7 November 2008). "Dumbed down", Maclean's. Retrieved 6 June 2015.
- McCormick, Rob (9 October 2012). "Global reach at school for learning disabled" Archived 2015-06-06 at the Wayback Machine. Peterborough Examiner. Retrieved 6 June 2015.
- EatonArrowsmithSchool.com. About us. Retrieved 6 June 2015.
- Shen, Molly (25 November 2014). "New take on learning disabilities: change the brain" Archived 2014-11-28 at the Wayback Machine. KOMO News. Retrieved 6 June 2015.
- Arrowsmithschool.org. org/arrowsmithschool-toronto/ cognitive-programs.html The Arrowsmith School Full Time Day Program . Retrieved 8 June 2015.
- "Tuition & Assessment Fees".
- ArrowsmithSchool.org. Trademarks. Retrieved 9 June 2015.
- ArrowsmithSchool.org. Arrowsmith Program: Participating schools. Retrieved 6 June 2015.
- ArrowsmithSchool.org. Background: Suitable students. Retrieved 6 June 2015.
- Brooking, Keren (March 2010). "Outside the mainstream" Archived 2015-06-13 at the Wayback Machine. Education Review. Retrieved 8 June 2015.
- ^ Dawson, George and D'Souza, Stephanie (23 March 2015). "Behavioural Interventions to Remediate Learning Disorders: A Technical Report" Archived 2015-06-14 at the Wayback Machine. Speld.org.nz.
- Clark, Elaine and Pompa, Janiece L. (2011). "Advances in Neuroscience and Reading Disabilities". The Oxford Handbook of School Psychology, pp. 183–184. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0195369807
- ^ Han, Esther (15 May 2012). "Proof hurdle for 'brain training'". Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 9 June 2015.
- Sydney Morning Herald (11 May 2012). "Experts question effectiveness of program". Retrieved 4 June 2015.
- Tarica, Elisabeth (18 June 2012). "Brain program heads this way". Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 4 June 2015.
- "Can Barbara Arrowsmith-Young's cognitive exercises change your brain?". Amanda Hooton. Good Weekend. 21 April 2017.
- Castles, Anne and McArthur, Genevieve (April 2013). "'Brain-training'...or learning as we like to call it". Learning Difficulties Australia Bulletin, Vol. 45, No 1. Retrieved 4 June 2015.
- Coltheart, Max (March 2014). "Neuromyths" Archived 2018-04-06 at the Wayback Machine. SPELD NSW Newsletter. Retrieved 4 June 2015.
- Archdiocese of Sydney (12 Jan 2015). "Brain "Workout" Program Scores Dramatic Results in Sydney CEO Trials". Retrieved 9 June 2015.
- "Proof hurdle for 'brain training'". Esther Han. The Sydney Morning Herald. 15 December 2012.
- Wickelgren, Ingrid (May/June 2013). "Calisthenics for a Child's Mind" Archived June 14, 2015, at the Wayback Machine. Scientific American Mind, pp. 39–45
- ^ Hill, M. F. (29 December 2008). "Education expert calling her lawyer". Vancouver Sun. Retrieved 31 May 2015.
- ^ Eaton, Howard (2013). "Siegel's Study: Points For Comment" Archived 2014-12-03 at the Wayback Machine. EatonArrowsmithSchool.com. Retrieved 9 June 2015.
- Manning, Rob (15 January 2014). "Oregon Charter School Considers 'Arrowsmith Program'. Oregon Public Broadcasting. Retrieved 9 June 2015.
- Gordon, Andrea (25 February 2009). "One school's belief in a fixable brain". Toronto Star. Retrieved 8 June 2015.
- Arrowsmithschool.org. Admissions. Retrieved 8 June 2015.
- University of British Columbia, Zoology Department. Darren Irwin. Retrieved 9 June 2015.
Further reading
- Alferink, Larry A. and Farmer-Dougan, Valeri (2010). "Brain-(not) Based Education: Dangers of Misunderstanding and Misapplication of Neuroscience Research". Exceptionality, Vol. 18, pp. 42–52
- McArthur, Genevieve and Castles, Anne (April 2013). "'Brain-training'... or learning as we like to call it",Learning Difficulties Australia, Vol. 45, No 1
- Coltheart, Max (10 December 2012). "Weird neuroscience: how education hijacked brain research" retrieved from The Conversation.
- Doidge, Norman (28 February 2001). "Brain Building". National Post (reprinted with permission on SocietyForQualityEducation.org)
- Melby-Lervåg, M. and, Hulme, C. (February 2013). "Is Working Memory Training Effective? A Meta-Analytic Review". Developmental Psychology, Vol. 49, No. 2, pp. 270–291 from the University of Oslo in Norway.
- Coltheart, Max "Neuromyths" . As published in the SPELD NSW Newsletter, March 2014
- "A Comprehensive Examination of the Arrowsmith Program at One Private School in Atlanta". Hawkins, Ronda. Department of educational policy studies, Georgia State University. May 15th, 2015.
External links
Brain training programs | |
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