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More Information Is Available At Our
Frequently Asked Questions Page.
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To whom it may concern:
The editorial staff of HEALTH NATURALLY decided to profile Jennifer
Lynne Dorfman and her Brainwave Programs as our special feature
therapy of the month.
This decision was based on the positive feedback we had received
from both children and adults concerning the value and effectiveness
of Lynne's programs. The people we interviewed reported major
improvements in many areas of their lives, both personal and
professional, as a result of taking the Brainwave Programs. Benefits
included greater confidence, productivity, reading and writing
skills, concentration, and decision-making skills. Problems such as
learning disabilities, depression, and emotional and psychological
imbalances improved dramatically.
Based on our research and interviews, we endorse the Brainwave
Programs and strongly recommend them to our readers.
For your information, HEALTH NATURALLY is a national health magazine
read by approximately 350,000 Canadians.
Sincerely,
Lorrie Imbert
Editor & Art Director
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The Brainwave Programs were developed
to clear up learning disabilities, emotional imbalances and mental
stress. By using a series of personalized brain enhancement
exercises, people create new brain circuits and learn new success
habits and self-motivation. The brain literally becomes balanced,
senses open, the body, mind and spirit connect, thinking becomes
sharper and suppressed feelings can be released - quickly, gently
and easily.
Evolution of Brainworks
The Brainwave Programs have been
evolving since 1984. They were created by Jennifer Lynne Dorfman,
who has over 20 years' experience in the fields of education and
counselling. The work she does at her centre, called
"Brainworks," is based on sound neurological principles
and encompasses the most recent research on the learning brain.
There are two types of Brainwave Programs. Program #1 is custom
designed for all ages from children to professional adults.
"Sensory and thinking responses can get scrambled when there is
physical, mental or emotional stress," says Dorfman. "In
the majority of cases, by combining inner-ear and sensory-motor
exercises, people can get over a myriad of concentration,
self-esteem and learning problems."
Fun brain exercises help participants make profound, rapid
improvement in such areas as reading, writing and math skills, while
strengthening self-esteem and a love of learning. Adult clients have
stated that their performance at work has increased notably. The
program is especially helpful for those with learning disabilities,
attention deficit disorder, and dyslexia.
Doing the gentle, individualized exercises, which participants
perform on balance boards, corrects imbalances of the inner ear and
actually causes the thinking brain to grow by creating new brain
circuits.
Adult Brain Games
Brainwave Program 2, "Brain Games and Anti-Depressant
Activities," is designed for adults. This program relieves
imbalances such as depression, anxiety and phobias - without using
medication. Enjoyable brain games and anti-depressant activities
help free individuals of trauma and old self-negating patterns. They
come to think, feel and perform in new ways that enable them to take
positive action in their lives.
The first research study of Brainwave Program 1 established that
after only 10 weeks of practising for 15 minutes a day,
participants' learning performance improved dramatically according
to the SOI (Structure of Intellect) Educational Analysis. A parallel
10-week study of Brainwave Program 2, consisting of depressed
adults, also resulted in major improvement. By the end of the study,
all participants had become more motivated and reported a sense of
overall well-being. In both cases, post-testing was administered and
graded by independent researchers.
Counseling is a key element in both Brainwave Programs. As well,
Dorfman embraces the holistic approach to brain fitness; when
allergies, nutritional deficiencies or environmental toxicity is
suspected, she refers clients to naturopathic physicians.
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Allan Chambers
The Edmonton Journal
Journal Staff Writer
Children who have dyslexia or attention deficit disorder should be
treated with brain exercises and not with drugs, says a Toronto
educator and lecturer.
"When you give medications (to children), it doesn't deal with
what's really going on," says Jennifer Lynne Dorfman, who has
developed a series of mental and physical exercises intended to
overcome so-called brain disabilities.
Dorfman lectures on learning disorders, and the potential through
her "Brainwave Programs," of overcoming them. The whole
field has become contentious recently as result of ongoing brain
research, the development of labels such as attention deficit
disorder (ADD) to describe learning difficulties, and the increasing
use of drugs to treat them.
In Alberta, for example, the number of prescriptions for Ritalin -
used to treat forms of hyperactivity - increased tenfold between
1986 and 1993 to about 23,000 prescriptions a year, leading to fears
it is being over-prescribed.
Dorfman, who heads a Toronto-based learning institute called
Brainworks, said in an interview that learning disorders can be
treated by exercises and mental activity based upon the brain's
"amazing and elastic" potential for growth.
But first it's necessary to do away with any negative labels that
children are often stuck with for life. Her approach, based upon
recent brain and physiological research, involves complex testing to
determine an individual's learning difficulties and talents. If a
label is to be used, "we identify where the person is gifted
and go from there. We apply a 'genius' label, not a negative label.
The inner ear plays a critical role in Dorfman's testing, because
she views it as a type of arbiter and transmitter of signals between
the outer world and the inner world of the brain.
If the inner ear is functioning improperly - from an infection, for
example - the brain will not be able to concentrate or process
information adequately.
At the base of ear problems are several stresses ranging from
pollutants to overly refined foods and even fluorescent lighting
that serve to reduce an individual's immune response system, she
believes. Other factors - such as physical and emotional abuse and
even a teacher's teaching style - can also have an impact. She cited
as an example a study that found higher prescription levels for
Ritalin in classrooms run by teachers with a "more rigid,
pedantic style."
Jolene Lets, program co-ordinator for the Cognitive Re-regulation
Program at the University of Alberta, said in an interview she is
unfamiliar with Dorfman's methods and couldn't comment directly. But
she noted the U of A program bears some similarities in that it
seeks solutions to learning problems by delving into brain activity.
The U of A program, carried on in the educational psychology
department, has determined that people with learning difficulties
often show higher levels of slow-wave brain activity, which is
required for sleep or relaxation but reduces the brain focusing that
is required for learning. As a practical application, the program
seeks to increase fast-wave activity when it is needed in children
diagnosed with ADD.
Lets agreed that negative labels can have a harmful effect, because
"if you're given a label, that's what sticks." Often,
children diagnosed with a problem label are in fact bright
individuals who can't, for physiological reasons, focus long enough
to pick up all the information given them. "So they feel stupid
and people say they're stupid."
Dorfman said her own methods are based on the observation that
people generally make far too little use of their brains, and that
the brain can create new circuits and expand its range of activity
through exercise. She noted that Albert Einstein's brain was
incredibly dense, suggested concentrated neural activity.
Dorfman's Toronto institute works with people from across North
America, the young to the elderly. If there is interest during her
tour of several western cities, she will offer a full program in
western Canada.
The program, developed at her Toronto institute, begins with an
intelligence test that takes about 3 1/2 hours and measures 26
different intellectual processing abilities. She then designs an
individual program of exercises that she described as a mix of
balance and sensory and motor exercises.
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The
Brainwave Programs in the News
Edmonton Sun
Saskatoon Journal
Star Phoenix
The Edmonton Journal
The Indigenous Times
The Leader Post
The Liberal
The Western Producer
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The
Brainwave Programs, Magazine Features
Health Naturally
Education Forum
Thornhill Month
"Why" Magazine
Charitable/Fund-Raising Speaking Events
International Alliance for Learning, California
Jewish Family and Child Services, Ontario
Mississauga Learning Disabilities Association, Ontario,
University of Calgary, Alberta, HART, Ontario, Information
Evenings, Across Canada
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Jennifer
Lynne Dorfman,
Radio Interviews and Call-In Shows
In Alberta
CBC, CFRN, CHED, CJSR, The Light
In Ontario
CFRB, CHML
In Saskatchewan
CBC, CKCK, CKRM, CJWN
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Jennifer
Lynne Dorfman,
Television Interviews
In Alberta
Access-The Education Station, ITV
In Saskatchewan
Cable Regina, CKC-TV, Shaw Cable TV, CFQC TV
In Ontario
Life Network, Rogers Television |
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