The History of Speed Learning
As someone who is interested in taking (or already taking) speed learning lessons, don’t you think it’s just right that you know its history and evolution?
Speed learning is one of the most useful scientific or psychological discoveries in recent years. And it really has an especially interesting history, not to mention a very long evolution.
Suggestopedia: Early History
When Bulgarian psychotherapist Georgi Lozanov initially introduced “Suggestopedia” (Speed Learning ‘ predecessor) in the late 1960s, a lot of the members of the medical and teaching community raised their eyebrows.
It was thought of as a “pseudo- science” as it was first developed as a teaching system wherein you teach a person a certain method by simply advising or making them believe that it works.
For example, you tell a kid that he’s truly good at mathematics. You encourage him. You let him know that he just might be a maths whiz. The more the kid hears this, the more that he will believe it. And when he thinks it, he becomes it- he becomes a maths expert.
Suggestopedia was used to teach a group of youngsters about language. Their experiment proved to achieve success when these scholars started learning 5 times quicker with this new teaching system.
Speed Reading: US History
Now, after ten years when it first came about, it reached US soil and it was altered and it then turned into speed learning or accelerated learning.
Speed learning is really first and more commonly known as “speed reading” before. And it is exactly what the name says. Thru this technique, somebody is ready to read and understand a book or document in a seriously faster rate.
After a little time, speed reading branched out and more learning techniques were developed and discovered.
Brain Exercises: Systematic History
Fresh studies and discoveries too about the human brain and how it operates have helped catapult speed learning into the main line scene.
Science has shown that there are two main parts of the brain.
The left hemisphere is the logical or analytical side of the brain. This part is stimulated when we do mathematical equations, learn science or study anything that’s unproven, in nature. This is also where the short term memory is made.
The right brain, on the other hand, is the exact opposite of the left brain. When we imagine, when we visualize photographs, when we feel feelings, we use the right side of the brain.
Speed learning suggests that we should use both of these hemispheres simultaneously to improve the processing and recall of information.
Regardless of its dodgy start, speed learning has actually proved to be a big discovery. For years before its conception, psychological therapists and education execs have been conducting many researches on what secrets to use to enhance a person’s capability to learn and remember. And well now, speed learning has provided them (and us) an answer.
Learn more aboout the History of Speed Learning by going to my Super Speed Learning web site.