About this item

An imaginative picture book that defines eight ways everyone is smart and shows how to get smarter in each way. It's easy for kids to get dejected and believe they're not as smart as the people around them. Maybe they got a low grade on their math test last week, or maybe they have a difficult time making new friends, but what kids may not realize is that math skills and people skills are just two types of smarts. There are actually eight types of smarts: Word smartsMusic smartsNumber smartsPicture smartsBody smartsPeople smartsSelf smartsNature smartsSmarts! Everybody's Got Them vividly explains and depicts the eight ways that everyone is smart and shows kids how they can get better at each one - even when they make a mistake.



About the Author

Thomas Armstrong

I've been a full-time writer and speaker for thirty-one years, focusing on the diversity of ways in which people learn and grow. I like to read (my favorite writers are James Joyce, Jorge Luis Borges, and David Foster Wallace) , do mindfulness meditation, improvise on the piano, cook (Mediterranean diet) , and watch art house movies on Filmstruck. I also like to travel. In 2015, I went to Machu Picchu, which was a real thrill, and last year I was in India, Colombia, Mexico, and Indonesia.

My latest book is The Myth of the ADHD Child: 101 Ways to Improve Your Child's Behavior and Attention Span without Drugs, Labels, or Coercion (Tarcher/Perigee) , publication date: August 29, 2017. In this book, I compare ADHD with the Blob from the old 1950's movie, which just keeps rolling over new markets and incorporating them into its structure (the ADHD blob started out small in the 1970's, then incorporated elementary school kids, then teens, then adults, and then young children - now I'm seeing articles on whether Alzheimer's symptoms may actually be ADHD, so they're going for the old folks now!) . In the book I share 7 reasons for the 42 percent increase in ADHD diagnoses, including the fact that we don't let kids play and be out in nature, and instead permit them to sit in front of electronic devices for hours every day, the fact that our schools have become test-taking factories, the fact that parents's stresses can translate into ADHD symptoms, the fact that we're living in a ''disability culture'' where strengths are minimized and weaknesses magnified. Finally, I look at how the ADHD ''blob'' has become a self-propelling force because of the economic inducements that come from the big profits made by pharmaceutical companies selling ADHD medications. And that's just the first third of the book!

Most of the book consists of 101 non-drug strategies that can help kids with their attention span and behavior issues; everything from let your child fidget to teach emotional regulation strategies. Some other strategies include: limiting junk food, building resilience, nurturing creativity, matching your child with a mentor, suggesting effective study strategies, teaching your child how his brain works, holding family meetings, making time for nature, and using music to focus and calm. I'm not against the use of medications for some kids, but I feel they're way over-prescribed, and that if parents (and doctors and psychologists) knew more about all the non-drug strategies that are out there, that there would be less need to label kids and medicate them (I also talk about the potential dangers of these drugs in the book) .

To find out more about this book or my other fifteen books, you can visit my website: www.institute4learning.com. The site includes articles I've written, video clips, a list of the keynotes and worksh



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