Here’s a quick overview of how the brain processes
information.
Basic Characteristics of Left and Right
brain:
In general, the left and right hemispheres of our
brain process information in different ways. While we have a natural tendency
towards one way of thinking, the two sides of our brain work together in our
everyday lives. The right brain of the brain focuses on the visual, and
processes information in an intuitive and simultaneous way, looking first at
the whole picture then the details. The focus of the left brain is verbal,
processing information in an analytical and sequential way, looking first at
the pieces then putting them together to get the whole.
Left brain thinking is verbal and analytical. Right
brain is non-verbal and intuitive, using pictures rather than words. The best
illustration of this is to listen to people give directions. The left brain
person will say something like “From here, go west three blocks and turn north
on Vine Street. Go three or four miles and then turn east onto Broad Street.”
The right brain person will sound something like this: “Turn right (pointing
right), by the church over there (pointing again). Then you will pass a
McDonalds and a Walmart. At the next light, turn right toward the Esso
station.”
Though right-brain or non-verbal thinking is often
regarded as more ‘creative’, there is no right or wrong here; it is merely two
different ways of thinking. One is not better than the other, just as being
right-handed is not ‘superior’ to being left-handed. What is important is to be
aware that there are different ways of thinking, and by knowing what your
natural preference is, you can pay attention to your less dominant side to
improve the same.
By learning abacus through the systematic training
approach at UCMAS, children can fully realize their potential by activating
both sides of their brain. By consciously using the right side of our brain, we
can be more creative. More so , because left brain strategies are the ones used
most often in the classroom, right brain students sometimes feel neglected.
By activating the power of both hemispheres, a child
will be able to retain knowledge better and become proficient in any subject,
especially math.
Join now , it’s never too late to start!
Workings of Our Brain
The human brain is made up of two halves. These
halves are commonly called the right brain and left brain , but should more
correctly be termed ‘hemispheres’. For some reason, our right and left
hemispheres control the ‘opposite’ side of our bodies, so the right hemisphere
controls our left side and processes what we see in our left eye while the left
hemisphere controls the right side and processes what our right eye sees.
The concept of right brain and left brain thinking
developed from the research in the late 1960s of an American psycho biologist
Roger W Sperry. He discovered that the human brain has two very different ways
of thinking. One (the right brain) is visual and processes information in an
intuitive and simultaneous way, looking first at the whole picture then the
details. The other (the left brain) is verbal and processes information in an
analytical and sequential way, looking first at the pieces then putting them
together to get the whole. Sperry was awarded a Nobel Prize in 1981.
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