Home
Home
About the Book & Author •• Courses & Workshops •• Sample Syllabus •• Order Drawing/Writing •• Sample Drawing/Writing •• Drawing/Writing Bulletin Board •• 13 principles for brain-compatible teaching and parenting •• Terms and Powerful Ideas •• The Scribble Hypothesis - The Entire Paper •• The Scribble Hypothesis - Abstract with Research Questions •• Paper in progress: The abstract for the paper Infant Laughter, Toddlers' Scribbles and the Metaphorical Three Year old •• Scribbles: The missing link in a theory of human language in which mothers and children play major roles •• Scribbles: The Missing Link in a Bio-Evolutionary Theory of Human Language with Implications for Human Consciousness - Presented at poster session, "Towards a Science of Consciousness 2004" •• Speaking in Tongues, or Glossolalia, consciousness states, and the mind/body benefits of fluent spiritual speech: Extending the purpose of linguistic experience - To be presented at poster session, "Towards a Science of Consciousness 2006" •• A Theory of Marks and Mind: the effect of notational systems on hominid brain evolution and child development with an emphasis on exchanges between mothers and children •• Multiple Literacies •• Article: The Scribble Hypothesis - Invisible Brain Building •• Scribbling, Drawing, Reading and Writing. Are these skills connected? A Parent’s questions, a teacher’s answers •• Just for Parents •• New Standards for Students and Teachers •• The Thinking Child: A handbook for parents •• Research Questions by chapters, appended to the forthcoming book: The Scribble Hypothesis: How Marks Change Minds

 Excerpts from Drawing/Writing and the new literary
Excerpts from Drawing/Writing and the new literary

Part One: The Reasons Why: A Pesuasive Essay in Four Sections •• Part Two: How to Do It: A User's Guide •• Part Three: Hitchhikers' Guide to Brain Science •• Part Four: The Thinking Child •• Appendices

Here are some excerpts from Drawing/Writing and the new literacy; because of limitations such as storage space, file size, and downloading time, these excerpts do not include all the beautiful illustrations from the book. Information on ordering Drawing/Writing and the new literacy is available by clicking the link below.

Note: The illustrations may take longer to download than the text, so you'll need to be patient; the text downloads right away, so you'll be able to read as you wait for the pictures.

Order Drawing/Writing

brain head Part One: The Reasons Why: A Pesuasive Essay in Four Sections

Part One of Drawing/Writing and the new literacy, is a persuasive essay demonstrating why drawing and writing belong together and how a program called Drawing/Writing models brain processes. The arguments are taken from art history, linguistics, education, psychology, the history of writing, and brain science.

The Drawing/Writing Experience

New Classrooms, New Teachers

The New Literacy

Part Two: How to Do It: A User's Guide

Part Two provides an icon-driven script, or course of instruction, for the five-step Drawing/Writing program.

How to Do It

Preliminary Drawing/Writing

Preliminary Drawing/Writing

To provide a pre-test sample for the evaluative tool Rescore, students draw their object for ten minutes and then write about it for ten minutes. They do this without any suggestions or instructions. In a multicultural classroom, students may do this preliminary writing in their own language with the understanding that they will have to translate this sample into English at their current skill level. After this preliminary step, all students must write in English. If skills in the target language are very weak, the student's mother tongue is used as a bridge into the new language. Starting with what students know is a cardinal constructionist rule. It is also sound neurobiology; the brain scaffolds new skills on existing structures.

In my experience, ten minutes is about the length of time most untrained students are productively able to draw or write about an object. Although students will be able to draw and write for longer periods of time after training in Drawing/Writing, the same ten minutes is allotted to the closing sample. The choice of a new object for the closing sample determines to what degree there has been a "transfer of skills." Skills learned by drawing a hammer, for instance, should transfer to a drawing of a geode. The goal of Drawing/Writing is the development and transfer of thinking skills into other context areas and into life beyond the classroom.

Download "Preliminary Drawing/Writing" exercise

Part Three: Hitchhikers' Guide to Brain Science

Part Three is a collation of information about the brain useful to parents, teachers, students and other thinkers. This guide includes 13 tips for how the brain grows and learns.

Excerpt from "Hitchhikers' Guide to Brain Science"

Part Four: The Thinking Child

Part Four is a curriculum guide to WholeBrain teaching and learning appropriate K-12 and at the college level for English courses and for studio courses and art history courses which can be taught in any language and applied to any content area.

Excerpt from "The Thinking Child"

Appendices

A section titled "How I got here" provides information about the author. An appendix, "Terms and Powerful Ideas," includes definitions of the terms "The New Literacy," (see article, The New Literacy," as well!)"Neuroconstructivism," "WholeBrain teaching and learning,"(click) as well as other terms and powerful ideas central to this book . Two bibliographies are included: one with the works cited in the book ("Works Cited"); a second with the doctoral research undergirding the book ("Extended Bibliography").

How I got here

Terms and Powerful Ideas

The New Literacy

Works Cited

Extended Bibliography

Search Drawing/Writing
Search   
This SiteThe Web
Get your own free Search Engine
Directions: Type in the word or phrase that you wish to find in the search box and click the "Go!" button. This will bring you to a listing of pages on this site that contain the term or phrase for which you are searching. Click on a page title in the listing to go to that page; once there, use your browser's "Find" utility (look under the "Edit" menu) to find the particular location on the page where your word or phrase is mentioned.

Home
Home

About the Book & Author •• Courses & Workshops •• Sample Syllabus •• Order Drawing/Writing •• Sample Drawing/Writing •• Drawing/Writing Bulletin Board •• 13 principles for brain-compatible teaching and parenting •• Terms and Powerful Ideas •• The Scribble Hypothesis - The Entire Paper •• The Scribble Hypothesis - Abstract with Research Questions •• Paper in progress: The abstract for the paper Infant Laughter, Toddlers' Scribbles and the Metaphorical Three Year old •• Scribbles: The missing link in a theory of human language in which mothers and children play major roles •• Scribbles: The Missing Link in a Bio-Evolutionary Theory of Human Language with Implications for Human Consciousness - Presented at poster session, "Towards a Science of Consciousness 2004" •• Speaking in Tongues, or Glossolalia, consciousness states, and the mind/body benefits of fluent spiritual speech: Extending the purpose of linguistic experience - To be presented at poster session, "Towards a Science of Consciousness 2006" •• A Theory of Marks and Mind: the effect of notational systems on hominid brain evolution and child development with an emphasis on exchanges between mothers and children •• Multiple Literacies •• Article: The Scribble Hypothesis - Invisible Brain Building •• Scribbling, Drawing, Reading and Writing. Are these skills connected? A Parent’s questions, a teacher’s answers •• Just for Parents •• New Standards for Students and Teachers •• The Thinking Child: A handbook for parents •• Research Questions by chapters, appended to the forthcoming book: The Scribble Hypothesis: How Marks Change Minds

Envelope Please e-mail your questions or comments for Dr. Sheridan
ssheridan@drawingwriting.com
Oops

Original page design and construction by Plummer's Mines
Page redesign and maintenance by WebFoot Graphics