Analyzing Learning

Richard Nantel

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    Richard Nantel CEO, Brandon Hall Research

    Richard Nantel
    CEO, Brandon Hall Research
    (Analyst Bio)

     

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  • Brain

    Study Suggests Omega 3 Helps Children With Learning Difficulties

    Monday, November 5th, 2007

    Canada AM this morning had an interview with Oxford’s Dr. Alexandra Richardson about the positive effects of omega 3 fatty acids on children experiencing learning difficulties in school. In a recent double blind study, children given a half gram of omega 3 supplements showed significant improvements in reading, writing, concentration, and behavior compared to children [...]

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    Looking For My Next Big Thing

    Monday, September 24th, 2007

    After helping my 75-year-old mother move out of the home where she and my father lived for 35 years, and sorting through a generation of broken toasters, no longer non-stick skillets, and 20 year-old bank statements, I’ve decided to get rid of non-essential stuff in my life.
    In sorting through everything, I realized how fervently I [...]

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    Brain Yoga

    Monday, June 18th, 2007

    For the last six weeks, I’ve been learning about brain plasticity theory. This has been a life-changing experience for me. Research showing that the brain can significantly change itself through learning is exciting, inspiring, and life-affirming. The promise that exercising your brain through new mental challenges can help keep Alzheimer’s disease and dementia at bay [...]

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    Learning and the Battle Against Alzheimer’s Disease

    Tuesday, June 12th, 2007

    The early years are all about learning. Babies’ and toddlers’ brains are in overdrive as they learn to interpret and interact with the world around them.
    When they begin attending school, children spend many hours each day learning brain-taxing skills such as math, reading, and writing.
    Adolescence and early adulthood require enormous amounts of learning as well, [...]

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    Bad News for Multitaskers

    Wednesday, May 30th, 2007

    Increasingly, work in the knowledge economy consists of slicing eight- to 10-hour days into tiny 10-minute segments allocated to a huge number of tasks. We work for a few minutes on one item, sort and respond to a couple of e-mails, take a phone call, work for another 10 minutes on the next task, and [...]

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    The Ultimate Pretest

    Thursday, May 24th, 2007

    Ever since I began reading about brain plasticity, I’ve started to sound more and more like Oprah and Dr. Phil when speaking to friends and family.
    “You have the ability to change.”
    “This task is only hard because your brain hasn’t made the necessary neural connections yet.”
    “You aren’t doomed to be weak at something for the rest [...]

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    New Brain Plasticity Theory to Create a Population of Life-Long Learners

    Saturday, May 5th, 2007

    I don’t know about you, but I’m VERY excited about the new theory of adult brain plasticity. Until recently, scientists viewed the adult brain as being hard-wired into areas responsible for different tasks. Injure an area of the brain, and the ability to do something was lost. Even more depressing, every day we age, our [...]

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