A Mind at a Time: America's Top Learning Expert Shows how Every Child Can Succeed by Mel Levine, Melvin D. Levine, Mel Levine

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(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: April 2002
  • 352pp
  • Sales Rank: 132,691
    Buy it Used: 212 copies from $1.99 See All Available

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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: April 2002
    • Publisher: Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group
    • Format: Hardcover, 352pp
    • Sales Rank: 132,691

    Synopsis

    "Different minds learn differently," writes Dr. Mel Levine, one of the best-known education experts and pediatricians in America today. And that's a problem for many children, because most schools still cling to a one-size-fits-all education philosophy. As a result, these children struggle because their learning patterns don't fit the schools they are in.

    In A Mind at a Time, Dr. Levine shows parents and others who care for children how to identify these individual learning patterns. He explains how parents and teachers can encourage a child's strengths and bypass the child's weaknesses. This type of teaching produces satisfaction and achievement instead of frustration and failure.

    Different brains are differently wired, Dr. Levine explains. There are eight fundamental systems, or components, of learning that draw on a variety of neurodevelopmental capacities. Some students are strong in certain areas and some are strong in others, but no one is equally capable in all eight. Using examples drawn from his own extensive experience, Dr. Levine shows how parents and children can identify their strengths and weaknesses to determine their individual learning styles.

    For example, some students are creative and write imaginatively but do poorly in history because weak memory skills prevent them from retaining facts. Some students are weak in sequential ordering and can't follow directions. They may test poorly and often don't do well in mathematics. In these cases, Dr. Levine observes, the problem is not a lack of intelligence but a learning style that doesn't fit the assignment. Drawing on his pioneering research and his work with thousands of students, Dr. Levine shows howparents and teachers can develop effective strategies to work through or around these weaknesses.

    "It's taken for granted in adult society that we cannot all be 'generalists' skilled in every area of learning and mastery. Nevertheless, we apply tremendous pressure to our children to be good at everything. They are expected to shine in math, reading, writing, speaking, spelling, memorization, comprehension, problem solving...and none of us adults can" do all this, observes Dr. Levine. Learning begins in school but it doesn't end there. Frustrating a child's desire to learn will have lifelong repercussions. This frustration can be avoided if we understand that not every child can do equally well in every type of learning. We must begin to pay more attention to individual learning styles, to individual minds, urges Dr. Levine, so that we can maximize children's learning potential. In A Mind at a Time he shows us how.

    Publishers Weekly

    Worried about the growing tendency to medicate and attach stigmatizing labels (such as ADD) to problematic learners, Levine, cofounder of the nonprofit institute All Kinds of Minds, offers parents a heartening new model of learning based on his deep respect for the uniqueness of individual minds. Levine's soft-spoken reading style lends to the tapes a personal, compassionate and reassuring tone that would be lost in the written word, gently guiding parents to identify their child's strengths and weaknesses in any of eight neurodevelopmental systems, including attention, motor, memory, language and social thinking. Describing himself as "a pediatrician with a mission," Levine confirms the resiliency of children's minds to overcome dysfunction, bolstering his argument with more than 30 years worth of case studies, stories of his own struggle with fine motor function, plenty of indicative symptoms corresponding to each "system of the mind" and helpful teaching concepts and tips to enhance all learning patterns. Levine's recommendation for listeners to follow up with his book and Web site rings true parents unfamiliar with their child's specific issues may find themselves a bit out of their depth, as the scope of this abridged version is extensive. Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

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    Biography

    Dr. Mel Levine is a professor of pediatrics at the University of North Carolina Medical School and the director of the university's Clinical Center for the Study of Development and Learning. He is the cofounder and cochair of All Kinds of Minds, a nonprofit institute that develops products and programs to help parents, teachers, clinicians, and children address differences in learning. A Rhodes scholar and graduate of Harvard Medical School, Dr. Levine lives in the Raleigh-Durham with his wife, Bambi, and many animals.

    Customer Reviews

    A Mind at a Time: America's Top Learning Expert Shows how Every Child Can Succeedby Anonymous

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    November 05, 2002: Every parent with a child that learns in a different way than the norm will find strategies, empathy, and hope in between the pages of this book. Because of what I learned from Mel Levine, I have taken a more active role in advocating for my son. I have scheduled meetings with the teacher and adjunct staff to search for workable options that will allow my son to learn and operate in ways that best suit him. He has sensory intergration problems, but is very gifted in computer programming and very well liked. He performs poorly on almost all standardized tests, but we found if someone reads the questions out loud to my son during the test, he understands the questions better and his scores significantly improve. He also has trouble keeping his place on the scantron answer sheet, which causes the answers to be off by one if he by accident misses answering a question. I'm told this happens due in part to his spatial learning disability. So when someone is able to check that my son is making a choice for each and every question, thereby keeping him on track taking the test properly, his score will more accurately reflect his cognitive ability in the subject matter. I believe, as does Mel Levine, that all children can learn to solve problems. After an initial meeting with my son's very dedicated and cooperative teacher along with regular follow-up sessions (that include my son), adjustments have been made in homework assignments, test-taking, and study routines. I am delighted that my son is doing much better academically in school and he feels he has actually gotten smarter. My son is proud of what he has accomplished. A great book to read along with this book is a book by Barbara Coloroso called "KIDS ARE WORTH IT-Giving Your Child the Gift of Inner Discipline". This book helps parents learn how to communicate more effectively with their children, so that the kids learn how to think and solve problems. Inner discipline and motivation takes some time to kick in and there are many things a parent can do to help their kids succeed both at home and at school. I highly recommend both of these compatible books.

    A Mind at a Time: America's Top Learning Expert Shows how Every Child Can Succeedby Anonymous

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    November 01, 2002: Every parent with a child that learns in a different way than the norm will find comfort, empathy and hope in between the pages of this book. Because of this book I have taken a more active role as an advocate for my son--examining options that the teacher and adjunct staff can use to help him learn in ways that best suit him. He has both learning disabilities and sensory intergration problems, but is very gifted in the arts and very well liked by his peers. He performs poorly on almost all standardized tests, but we found if someone reads the questions out loud to my son during the test, his scores greatly improve. He also has trouble keeping his place on the scantron answer sheet, which causes answers to be off by one if he accidently misses marking an answer on the correct line. This happens often do in part, I'm told, to his spatial learning disability...So the "reader" (requested through special ed) oversees that my son is making a choice for each and every question, thereby keeping him on track taking the standardized test that will now more accurately show his cognitive ability. I believe, as does Mel Levine, that all children can learn to solve problems. After an initial meeting with my son's very dedicated and cooperative teacher along with regular follow-up sessions (that included my son), adjustments have been made in homework assignments, test-taking, and study routines. I am delighted that my son is doing much better academically in school. He is proud of what he has accomplished and he no longer feels he is dumb as far as taking tests. Another great book to read along with this book is by Barbara Coloroso caled "KIDS ARE WORTH IT-Giving Your Child the Gift of Inner Discipline". This book gave me many practical suggestions of how to communicate more effectively on a daily basis with my son to help him learn how to think, take ownership of a problem, and solve it. Inner discipline and motivation takes some time to kick in and there are many things a parent can do to help their kids succeed-- both at home and at school.


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