| “The best time to tap into your baby’s innate abilities, the capacities that all children are born with, is when his brain cells are rapidly growing and making new connections.” |
- Makoto Shichida
Professor of Education
Founder of the Shichida Education Institute, which provides right-brain training to infants and children |
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“Never forget that when you are giving a child visual, auditory, and tactile stimulation with increased frequency, intensity and duration that you are actually physically growing his brain.” |
- Glenn Doman
Founder of the Institutes for the Achievement of Human Potential |
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“Improve your child’s ability to learn by using more than one of the five senses. When we use different senses we create multiple encoding, which increases the number of sites where information is stored.” |
- Winifred Conkling
Author of Smart-Wiring Your Baby's Brain |
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“There is, however, a limit to how much stimulation a young child should have. Too many toys, activities, and outings can create confusion and actually work to a child’s detriment, hampering his ability to focus. Children are usually pretty good at telling us when they are bored but not when they are over-stimulated. Their behavior is often the only sign.” |
- Lise Eliot
Author of Early Intelligence:
How the Brain and Mind Develop in the First Five Years of Life |
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