"Out of my seven years of professional development, this is THE most important training for effective classroom teaching that I’ve ever received."
—Patricia Amaro, English Language Arts Teacher at Grandview Middle School, WA
"This neural lens gives me a totally different approach to my way of teaching. Our Hopi students need this way of thinking, and I plan to pass along what I've learned to my administrator and to other educators here in Arizona."
—April Honahnie, K-8 Teacher at Hotevilla-Bacavi Community School, AZ
"Finally, the science behind what works in learning! This is training unlike all other professional learning because it is continuously rooted in the 'why'. This work explains how the brain interacts with environmental and internal stimuli with the overarching goal of supporting each teacher’s understanding of enough neuroscience to shift daily learning."
—Rosa M. Villarreal, Principal of Kent Elementary School, WA
"This is crusader work. Dr. O’Mahony is rowing against the current, but this important book will stand the test of time."
—Terry Bergeson, Washington State Superintendent of Public Instruction (former) and Interim Dean (retired) of the School of Education and Kinesiology at Pacific Lutheran University, USA
"This book will be important for every teacher because knowledge is power. I am shocked and delighted to learn things about the brain that are so valuable in my daily classroom practice, especially in distance learning spaces. Amygdala, hippocampus, and working memory mean so much more to me now. This is the future of human enhancement!"
— Stéphanie Turcotte, Teacher at École Claudette-et-Denis-Tardif, Canada
"Learning about children's thinking from the inside out has given me a new perspective on education as a teacher. I now see students, and my own children, through what is going on inside their minds and their thinking rather than feeling frustrated that they are not doing things exactly the way that I have told them to. Knowing your ‘orchid students’ and teaching with them in mind will yield greater results than driving on without them and then trying to formulate interventions to catch them up."
—Sean Sturgill, Fifth Grade Teacher at Lackamas Elementary, Yelm Community Schools, WA
"Out of my seven years of professional development, this is THE most important training for effective classroom teaching that I’ve ever received."
—Patricia Amaro, English Language Arts Teacher at Grandview Middle School, WA
"This neural lens gives me a totally different approach to my way of teaching. Our Hopi students need this way of thinking, and I plan to pass along what I've learned to my administrator and to other educators here in Arizona."
—April Honahnie, K-8 Teacher at Hotevilla-Bacavi Community School, AZ
"Finally, the science behind what works in learning! This is training unlike all other professional learning because it is continuously rooted in the 'why'. This work explains how the brain interacts with environmental and internal stimuli with the overarching goal of supporting each teacher’s understanding of enough neuroscience to shift daily learning."
—Rosa M. Villarreal, Principal of Kent Elementary School, WA
"This is crusader work. Dr. O’Mahony is rowing against the current, but this important book will stand the test of time."
—Terry Bergeson, Washington State Superintendent of Public Instruction (former) and Interim Dean (retired) of the School of Education and Kinesiology at Pacific Lutheran University, USA
"This book will be important for every teacher because knowledge is power. I am shocked and delighted to learn things about the brain that are so valuable in my daily classroom practice, especially in distance learning spaces. Amygdala, hippocampus, and working memory mean so much more to me now. This is the future of human enhancement!"
— Stéphanie Turcotte, Teacher at École Claudette-et-Denis-Tardif, Canada
"Learning about children's thinking from the inside out has given me a new perspective on education as a teacher. I now see students, and my own children, through what is going on inside their minds and their thinking rather than feeling frustrated that they are not doing things exactly the way that I have told them to. Knowing your ‘orchid students’ and teaching with them in mind will yield greater results than driving on without them and then trying to formulate interventions to catch them up."
—Sean Sturgill, Fifth Grade Teacher at Lackamas Elementary, Yelm Community Schools, WA