Research

Research Based, Research Driven, and Field Tested

Why you must use all three!

 

The Learning Success System exercises are designed on one or more of the three following criteria:

 

  • Research Based
  • Research Driven
  • Field Tested

 

Using all three areas creates a huge advantage for users of the Learning Success System. Read below to learn why. First let's define what these mean.

 

Research Based - This is when the exact exercises used have been through critical review by researchers. Obviously is something has been proven to work then it's a good idea to use it. And we certainly do

 

Research Driven - This is when a concept has been researched and proven effective. We then develop exercises based upon this concept. We constantly monitor the research for these new findings. Not only in the field of educational research but also in neuroscience and positive psychology. These new findings happen on a very regular basis and by following the research we are able to keep our system at the forefront. This is cutting edge science. Many of the most important findings are very recent and are not even in the textbooks yet.

 

Field Tested - It is very common for those in the field to come up with the best ideas and to make realizations that are critical to the process. Many of these concepts have simply not caught the eye of the researchers or have not had the time to be researched. But they can have big value and be very effective. If something has been observed once or twice this is not a reason to get excited over the idea. In that case we would not use it. But if the idea has been observed independently by hundreds or even thousands of practitioners in the field then leaving it out would be foolish. 

 

You may have seen many systems or people speaking of using systems that are wholly researched based. This sounds laudable but keep in mind that this might be a synonym for "behind the times". It takes decades for research to filter down to academia. Textbooks are notoriously behind. So unless a practitioner keeps up with the new research it is possible that they are actually decades behind the true knowledge base. Keeping on mind that the most important discoveries are barely a decade old this is very important. Many of the most popular systems used today are based on research that is over 80 years old. This doesn't necessarily mean the system is bad, just that it may be incomplete and not ive you the full advantages you will want to help your child.

 

Because the Learning Success System derives its concepts from all three it bundles the advantages of all. Obviously, you want a system that gives you the most advantages and makes helping your child as easy as possible for you. Right?

 

Get the Learning Success System here.

Found 116 results
Author Title Type [ Year(Desc)]
2015
Rattan A, Savani K, Chugh D, Dweck CS.  2015.  Leveraging Mindsets to Promote Academic Achievement: Policy Recommendations.. Perspect Psychol Sci. 10(6):721-6.
de Bode S, Chanturidze M, Mathern GW, Dubinsky S.  2015.  Literacy after cerebral hemispherectomy: Can the isolated right hemisphere read? Epilepsy Behav. 45:248-53.
Varma VR, Chuang Y-F, Harris GC, Tan EJ, Carlson MC.  2015.  Low-intensity daily walking activity is associated with hippocampal volume in older adults.. Hippocampus. 25(5):605-15.
Duckworth AL, Yeager DScott.  2015.  Measurement Matters: Assessing Personal Qualities Other Than Cognitive Ability for Educational Purposes.. Educ Res. 44(4):237-251.
Bucci MPia, Ajrezo L, Wiener-Vacher S.  2015.  Oculomotor tasks affect differently postural control in healthy children.. Int J Dev Neurosci. 46:1-6.
Cuddy AJC, Wilmuth CA, Yap AJ, Carney DR.  2015.  Preparatory power posing affects nonverbal presence and job interview performance.. J Appl Psychol. 100(4):1286-95.
Hoza B, Smith AL, Shoulberg EK, Linnea KS, Dorsch TE, Blazo JA, Alerding CM, McCabe GP.  2015.  A randomized trial examining the effects of aerobic physical activity on attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder symptoms in young children.. J Abnorm Child Psychol. 43(4):655-67.
Martin A, Schurz M, Kronbichler M, Richlan F.  2015.  Reading in the brain of children and adults: a meta-analysis of 40 functional magnetic resonance imaging studies.. Hum Brain Mapp. 36(5):1963-81.
Carney DR, Cuddy AJC, Yap AJ.  2015.  Review and Summary of Research on the Embodied Effects of Expansive (vs. Contractive) Nonverbal Displays.. Psychol Sci. 26(5):657-63.
Von Mentzer CNakeva, Lyxell B, Sahlén B, Dahlström Ö, Lindgren M, Ors M, Kallioinen P, Engström E, Uhlén I.  2015.  Segmental and suprasegmental properties in nonword repetition--an explorative study of the associations with nonword decoding in children with normal hearing and children with bilateral cochlear implants.. Clin Linguist Phon. 29(3):216-35.
Bharadwaj SV, Maricle D, Green L, Allman T.  2015.  Working memory, short-term memory and reading proficiency in school-age children with cochlear implants.. Int J Pediatr Otorhinolaryngol. 79(10):1647-53.
2016
Puetz VB, Viding E, Palmer A, Kelly PA, Lickley R, Koutoufa I, Sebastian CL, McCrory EJ.  2016.  Altered neural response to rejection-related words in children exposed to maltreatment.. J Child Psychol Psychiatry. 57(10):1165-73.
Dimitriadis SI, Sun Y, Thakor NV, Bezerianos A.  2016.  Causal Interactions between Frontal(θ) - Parieto-Occipital(α2) Predict Performance on a Mental Arithmetic Task.. Front Hum Neurosci. 10:454.
Roche R, Viswanathan P, Clark JE, Whitall J.  2016.  Children with developmental coordination disorder (DCD) can adapt to perceptible and subliminal rhythm changes but are more variable.. Hum Mov Sci. 50:19-29.
Gilliver M, Cupples L, Ching TYC, Leigh G, Gunnourie M.  2016.  Developing Sound Skills for Reading: Teaching Phonological Awareness to Preschoolers With Hearing Loss.. J Deaf Stud Deaf Educ. 21(3):268-79.
Claro S, Paunesku D, Dweck CS.  2016.  Growth mindset tempers the effects of poverty on academic achievement.. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 113(31):8664-8.
Qi T, Gu B, Ding G, Gong G, Lu C, Peng D, Malins JG, Liu L.  2016.  More bilateral, more anterior: Alterations of brain organization in the large-scale structural network in Chinese dyslexia.. Neuroimage. 124(Pt A):63-74.
Geertsen SSparre, Thomas R, Larsen MNejst, Dahn IMarie, Andersen JNeedham, Krause-Jensen M, Korup V, Nielsen CMalta, Wienecke J, Ritz C et al..  2016.  Motor Skills and Exercise Capacity Are Associated with Objective Measures of Cognitive Functions and Academic Performance in Preadolescent Children.. PLoS One. 11(8):e0161960.
Dębska A, Łuniewska M, Chyl K, Banaszkiewicz A, Żelechowska A, Wypych M, Marchewka A, Pugh KR, Jednoróg K.  2016.  Neural basis of phonological awareness in beginning readers with familial risk of dyslexia-Results from shallow orthography.. Neuroimage. 132:406-16.
Xia Z, Hoeft F, Zhang L, Shu H.  2016.  Neuroanatomical anomalies of dyslexia: Disambiguating the effects of disorder, performance, and maturation.. Neuropsychologia. 81:68-78.
Jolles D, Ashkenazi S, Kochalka J, Evans T, Richardson J, Rosenberg-Lee M, Zhao H, Supekar K, Chen T, Menon V.  2016.  Parietal hyper-connectivity, aberrant brain organization, and circuit-based biomarkers in children with mathematical disabilities.. Dev Sci. 19(4):613-31.
Farris EA, Ring J, Black J, G Lyon R, Odegard TN.  2016.  Predicting Growth in Word Level Reading Skills in Children With Developmental Dyslexia Using an Object Rhyming Functional Neuroimaging Task.. Dev Neuropsychol. 41(3):145-61.
Preston JL, Molfese PJ, Frost SJ, W Mencl E, Fulbright RK, Hoeft F, Landi N, Shankweiler D, Pugh KR.  2016.  Print-Speech Convergence Predicts Future Reading Outcomes in Early Readers.. Psychol Sci. 27(1):75-84.
Harvey EM, Miller JM, J Twelker D, Davis AL.  2016.  Reading Fluency in School-Aged Children with Bilateral Astigmatism.. Optom Vis Sci. 93(2):118-25.
Gullick MM, Demir-Lira ÖEce, Booth JR.  2016.  Reading skill-fractional anisotropy relationships in visuospatial tracts diverge depending on socioeconomic status.. Dev Sci. 19(4):673-85.

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