Have you ever wondered why you learn some things easily while other things seem harder? And have you noticed that the things you find easy may be hard for other people, while they breeze through learning tasks that take you forever?
Learning is not just about intelligence—or about motivation. In fact, research in neuroscience, cognitive psychology, and related fields is shedding a great deal of light on how each of us learns, and on how we differ from one another in how we learn.
A variety of mental “ingredients” go into learning, from the ability to understand and use words to the ability to control various muscle movements. Many of these ingredients—like memory and attention—have different and distinct parts. (Curious? Read more about the mental processes that shape learning.)
Who are you as a learner? Take a snapshot of yourself as a learner with our interactive Learner Sketch Tool! Then download or email yourself a copy of your Learner Sketch report, which includes strategies for managing learning challenges.

What Else Can I Do?



Investigate Ways to Support Students Who Struggle in School
Many students who struggle in school do so because their individual learning needs are not fully understood by the adults in their lives. The All Kinds of Minds Parent Toolkit provides information, case studies, and strategies around four key areas: attention, mathematics, reading, and writing. Embedded videos lend insight into how students with particular learning challenges—such as susceptibility to visual or audio distraction—may be experiencing the classroom.

Embrace Your Affinities
We all have subjects or areas that we are drawn to, find inherently interesting, or feel passionately about. Leveraging such affinities can help motivate student success in school—as well as adult success in the “real world.”