Dr Kawashima's brain training will change your life... Like the body, the brain needs exercise. And Dr Ryuta Kawashima, world-renowned professor of neuroscience at Tohoku University and the expert behind the bestselling computer game Dr Kawashima's Brain Training, has dedicated his life to researching exactly how we can make our brains work better. Here are the results - in a highly rewarding programme of carefully chosen, yet deceptively simple activities. Each day you fill in a worksheet of exercises and with weekly self-tests and a personal logbook you can track your progress. Taking just a few minutes a day over two months, you really can boost your brain power and creativity. Join the Dr Kawashima revolution today.
If your teen is to have a rewarding, enjoyable and successful schooling experience, she or he must fully understand the key skills of maths. With 'Train your Brain' you can ensure your teen's educational foundations are as solid as possible.
This innovative and appealing series provides readers with esssential information about the body's most vital organ-the brain. Each title examines the brain using a different perspective to give readers a thorough, interdisciplinary understanding of the brain's role as control center of the body. Train Your Brain: How Your Brain Learns Best, Your brain has an amazing ability to make changes and reorganize itself throughout your lifetime. This motivating title will help you understand how your brain learns and how our neural connections form and grow. Dive in to learn tips, strategies, and mindsets to help unlock your brain's learning potential. Book jacket.
Executive functions are a set of thinking, problem-solving, and self-control skills that tell the brain what to do, and this book demonstrates the ways kids use executive functions in school, at home, and in their other activities and shows how these skills can be improved through sustained effort. Beginning with a test to determine executive-functioning strengths and weaknesses, the book then explores in detail eight distinct sets of skills, including planning, organization, focus, time management, self-control, flexibility, memory, and self-awareness. In addition to giving an overview of each executive-functioning skill and how these skills are used in the real world, the book?intended as a self-directed learning guide for students themselves?also provides teens tools and tips for improving executive functions, including how to use video games, iPods, cell phones, and other electronic media to their advantage. A section for teachers and parents who may be dealing with a teenager with one or more executive dysfunctions is also included, as well as information for teens on how to recognize when they need help and where to go for help when a problem arises.