What is the major learning problem for the right-brained student?
The major learning problem for the right-brained student is understanding what letters and numbers represent. Letters and numbers on their own are very abstract and represent nothing to the right brain. Most of the words in our language are abstract and cannot be turned into complete picture images because the brain cannot see anything when it only hears an abstract sound such as since. It must have three learning senses working together to memorize a word.: hearing it said, seeing a concrete image in the mind of what it represents and printing the word on paper or typing it out. Just hearing the sound of the word is not enough for the right brain to understand it and store it in memory. It needs a concrete image of the word. So to understand the word and memorize it, the right brain must hear the full sound of the word and see a printed copy of the word. This must be followed by copying the word at least five times or until the printed image becomes a concrete image in the right brain