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Educators, parents, and even students themselves agree that most students can and should be doing much better in school than they are. The SuperStudent® Seminar provides an arsenal of proven techniques and information, not usually available to students, to make achieving academic success much easier. In a one-day, four hour format, the SuperStudent® Seminar will help students to:
- Remember large amounts of data quickly and easily
Plus, the SuperStudent® Seminar encourages creativity and enhances self-esteem. Students discover that they have much more powerful brains than they thought, and they learn how to take more initiative in their studies.
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Visual Thinking is the Foundation
As children, we all think visually at first. Our early education is primarily visual; our first books are heavily illustrated, and we learn through flash card pictures, building blocks, paints and crayons, and frequently, television. Our brains love to think in pictures.
As we progress through school, however, visual thinking is gradually discouraged in favor of a more verbal, analytical approach. Textbooks have fewer pictures and graphics. Our early visual training is gradually abandoned. Yet our ability to learn information visually is still there, often lying dormant.
The SuperStudent® Seminar teaches students how to use these visual thinking skills as a powerful support tool for the verbal/analytic skills being taught in school.
The SuperStudent® Seminar consists of four sections:
1) Memory
Students' grades often depend on how well they remember academic material. Yet few students have ever been shown how to remember large amounts of data quickly and efficiently. Instead of the tedious and ineffective rote memory approach that most students rely on, they will be shown how to:
- Associate new material with what they already know
- Make names, dates, and facts come alive
- Learn how to easily retrieve information from their brain
- Remember far more than they ever thought possible
The visual thinking exercises in this section encourage creative and fluid thinking. With "before and after" examples, students see the enormous difference these easier memory techniques
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