For more information on any
of these seminars call toll free at 1-866-679-1569.
If
you are interested in starting a tutoring business and providing
PACE and Master
The Code to those in your community, please watch our our
introductory Video which...
Demonstrates training procedures used with students who have
learning problems.
Reviews the concepts of learning and how to improve learning.
Discusses learning disabilities (LD), dyslexia, attention deficit
and hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and other learning problems.
Contains comments from students, parents, and providers.
- Click To Play - Double-click video to view fullscreen
If you would like additional information about
becoming a provider, then please click here. The following information will be sent to you via email:
Articles on PACE and Master The Code
"Why be a PACE/MTC provider"
Studies documenting our results
A Provider Agreement Form
Our newsletter
If
you are not interested in becoming a provider, but want to talk
to a provider near you, please click
hereand we'll email you their names, addresses,
and phone numbers.
Or call us at 866-679-1569.
If
you are not interested in being a provider but want help for yourself
or someone you love, please click
here to learn about the options available to you.
About 85 to 90 percent of learning difficulties
are due to poor underlying learning skills. These skills include:
Attention/Concentration: the ability to stay
on task or ignore distractions. For example, continuing to read
a book while another group is in a discussion.
Phonetic awareness: the ability to blend
sounds, segment (unglue) sounds, and analyze sounds. Problems
with reading new words or spelling errors in writing result
from poor phonetic awareness.
Memory: the ability to recall short or long
term information. For example, copying from a board (short term)
or taking a final history exam (long term).
Comprehension: the ability to understand.
Visualization: the ability to create mental
pictures. For example, seeing "in the mind" a math
word problem before trying to solve it.
Processing Speed: the ability to handle and
process information quickly.
This is easy to determine. If you or your child is able to understand
and perform as others do with extra help or tutoring, then the
cause of the struggle is poor or inadequate instruction. But if
good performance is achieved only after long hours, sweat, or
many mistakes, then the problem is deeper.
Very few enter school or a job not wanting to succeed. It is
only after they find it difficult, experience failure, or are
ridiculed that they avoid the activities that give them pain.
In other words, a lack of motivation is usually the result of
a learning problem - not the cause.
Heredity does play a role, but it is minor. It is generally believed
that between 40% and 70% of our mental abilities are learned,
not inherited. Therefore, we can accomplish far more if we stop
blaming the problems on genes, which we can't change, and
start enhancing the skills that are learned and can be changed.
Absolutely. IQ is only an average of many different learning
skills, which means it's possible for someone who has "normal"
intelligence to have scored high on some skills and low on others.
And if those "low" scores are in the skills required
for reading or math, then reading or math achievement will be
low even though IQ is "normal." Read more about the
misinterpretation of achievement and
IQ test scores.
Every school activity a child does has the potential to further
develop an underlying learning skill. But this will only happen
if the activity is challenging. School lessons are often either
too hard (frustrating) or too easy (boring) because children seldom
have equal learning skills. Therefore, to make significant improvement
in these skills, individual attention is required.
Many schools simply don't have the time or funds to provide
this very intensive and structured one-on-one training. Also,
most teachers tend to teach to the child's stronger skills.
By avoiding the weak skills, they don't get developed. The
result may be a life-long learning handicap.
The purpose of PACE is to help people learn easier, faster, and
more efficiently. To do this, we first determine if any learning
skills are deficient. If there are, we determine how much they
can be improved and what impact the improvement will have on the
person's learning and life. If that impact is significant,
we then design a very intense one-on-one training program that
involves active participation by the child's family. (One
of the most significant and noticeable impacts that PACE makes
on childrens' lives is on their self-esteem. When children see
improvements in their performance, they feel much better about
themselves and work harder to achieve even more.) We can give
you the name and telephone number of a provider in your area,
help you become a provider (college degree required) , or train
you to tutor your own child.
PACE was developed in clinical settings using real people with
real learning problems but utilizing and applying the best scientific
research.
PACE is directed by some of the nation's most highly regarded
experts on learning in the fields of clinical and neuropsychology,
visual and auditory processing, and education. These experts have
been responsible for hundreds of professional articles, research
projects, books, publications, and lectures throughout the world.
Their purpose is to ensure that new developments in learning are
applied to help those with cognitive deficiencies succeed.
In the last few years, great strides have been made by researchers
to expand our understanding of how the brain works. This has allowed
the creation of better learning models and remedial strategies
to help those who have difficulty learning. Today, PACE is at
the forefront of using this knowledge to make significant improvements
in learning skills.
Academic content could cause some students to resist training
because it may seem too much like school, which the student may
associate with negative experiences. Also, the short-range goal
of PACE is improved learning performance. PACE improves the student's
learning performance so that the student is able to learn more
easily and efficiently. This then makes it possible to achieve
PACE's long-range goal of improved academic or job related performance.
PACE training procedures are made up of tasks that are designed
to meet specific goals. The tasks are related, make repetitive
demands on a deficient skill, and progressively increase in difficulty.
This is a process-specific approach to training (as opposed to
a general stimulation approach). A process-specific approach targets
the same function systematically and repetitively with related
tasks.
PACE is done one-on-one for two reasons. First, the activities
need to be sequenced according to each student's skill level.
Each training task demands very specific skills. The student needs
to be constantly challenged. If the task is too easy, it's boring.
But if it's too hard, it's frustrating. Procedures that are challenging
will cause the most improvement.
Second, we need to provide immediate feedback. Students need
praise when performing correctly as an incentive to keep working,
and they need correction when making an error so they are aware
of the mistake. Later, they learn to recognize and correct their
own errors.
Although these methods may be effective in correcting a sensory,
motor, or very specific academic problem, they have had limited
results in significantly improving learning performance.
PACE, on the other hand, is a process-specific approach using
planned, repetitive exercises that place demands on deficient
mental functions. When the student masters the exercise, a more
demanding exercise that targets the same mental skill is available
to continue the training.
No. Normally a student with fewer deficient learning skills will
progress faster than a student with many. Each procedure is graded
according to difficulty and tasks become progressively more complex.
Pace is regulated by mastery, so the number of tasks completed
during training differ from student to student. In other words,
once the student passes a task, he or she is then allowed to progress
to the next challenge (a more difficult task).
Seldom. Because we start at the point the student can achieve
and then gradually increase the demand - like a video game - the
student gains ability and confidence. At times the student may
get frustrated in the same way she or he would with a video game.
Yes. The skills developed are used each day the student is in
school or at work. They are constantly being used and therefore
don't regress. This retention is reflected in a study that showed
that 98.7% of the one year follow-up cognitive test scores were
at least as high as they were at the completion of PACE.
We believe that getting big, fast changes is far better than
getting slow, gradual changes for two reasons. First, it is easier
to get parents to commit to working very hard for 12 weeks than
one hour a week for 18 months. Second, it's important that students
see big changes quickly - this will increase their self-esteem
and they'll be motivated to work even harder because they can
see the payoff.
Our training is not done in secret. Parents are required to spend
at least 3 hours per week doing procedures with their child. Therefore
parents will know if improvement is being made.
Stop. If at any time you are not satisfied that the changes are
not worth the time, money, and effort, stop. We're here to help
get maximum improvement in the shortest period of time. If it's
not happening - don't continue.
PACE is licensed to providers who set their own fees. The fees
vary by location and type of provider. However, in most cases,
the fees are similar to the fees charged by tutoring centers.
PACE tackles the cause rather than the effect. If the reason
for learning difficulties is poor instruction, then academic tutoring
is the correct solution. But if there is a deficient underlying
learning skill, then academic tutoring is only a stop-gap and
will need to be repeated year after year. PACE, on the other hand,
"cures" the cause.
Many providers (check with your provider) offer two guarantees.
(1) If after four sessions you are not completely satisfied there
is a full refund.
(2) If after the training is completed there has not been at least
a two year improvement in a deficient learning skill, and you
are not satisfied, there is a full refund.
We wish everyone would. Our greatest supporters are our own parents
and students. Your local provider will likely have the names of
people you can contact. Also, please look through the parent comments
on this website. They are not doctored (in fact, they are not
even the best of the best), but the bulk of the comments on this
website come from one office during a three month span. Click
here for parent and student comments.
PACE's pre and post test results show changes in cognitive skills
which are unmatched. And our studies are not just done on small
control groups of 15 to 25 students but on thousands of students
and by a multitude of providers throughout the country. Average
gains in deficient learning skills are greater than 3.6
years in only ten weeks! These gains are reflected in
IQ scores that show an average 28 point increase where IQ was
below the norm and an average 13 point increase where IQ was initially
above the norm! For more details click
here.
Numerous studies have shown the major cause of reading
problems is the inability to 'unglue' sounds in words, blend
sounds to form words, and analyze sounds within words. In other
words, most students with reading
problems struggle to hear, analyze,
and separate the individual phonemes in words. Furthermore, it
has been shown that children don't automatically learn to segment
words into sounds simply because they are exposed to a reading
system.
PACE includes procedures that evaluate, pinpoint and develop
to advanced levels the underlying mental skills required to assure
fast and efficient learning-to-read skills. Beyond this, the developers
of PACE have also developed a revolutionary new sound-based one-on-one
reading and spelling program called Master The Code. For more
information see www.masterthecode.com.
Internal motivation comes from within a person. It is a person's
individual need - for a reason that others may not even
be aware of - to attain a goal. Those with a history of
learning problems are often lacking in this area. They do not
feel that they can attain goals, so they do not have the motivation
to try to attain them. The possibility for improvement seems so
poor that they do not sustain the maximum effort that should be
put forth to accomplish a task. Therefore, in PACE, we make sure
students quickly achieve many small successes. In many cases,
within three weeks, students have moved beyond what they had previously
thought would be impossible, and are then ready and eager for
new and greater challenges. Success breeds success, and as students
experience improved skills and capabilities their self image will
soar!
Most providers offer a four session money back guarantee. This
gives you a chance to test the waters. If after four sessions
you don't feel comfortable or doubt the effectiveness, or for
any reason you don't want to continue, stop. Providers don't want
to continue unless you fully support the program. (Check details
with your provider).
To accomplish a task, a student needs feedback so that he or
she can understand what is correct and what is incorrect.
If the student performs a task correctly, the trainer reinforces
the performance by giving immediate praise. This will create a
sense of accomplishment in the student and an internal motivation
to keep trying to succeed.
Besides positive reinforcement, the student also needs corrective
feedback. If the student performs the task incorrectly, the trainer
informs the student of the error and has the student repeat the
task. Then, when the student understands when an error has occurred,
he or she can enter the second stage of correction. This involves
the student correcting his or her own errors and repeating the
task on his or her own. Finally, the student is allowed to continue
a task without interruption - even after an error -
as long as he or she is aware of it.
After 10 or 12 weeks, post testing is done to determine progress.
Because the average improvement is about 3.6 year gains for each
deficient skill, most students are then at or above their age
level. At this point providers, parents, and students can determine
if they need and want to continue. Our recommendation is that
as long as the gains being made are worth the time, money and
effort - continue, and if not - discontinue.
Mental skills may sometimes appear fixed, especially since IQ
results have been used for years to classify and label people
as having a specific level of intelligence. But the truth is that
we do not have to accept poor mental skills because we can improve
them. They are not fixed. A numerical IQ result is simply an average
of the many mental skills that are tested by an intelligence test.
This average reflects a person's present
level of mental functioning - not a fixed ability that is
constant across a life span. Mental skills are learned skills
and can, therefore, be practiced and improved.
For years, we have known that we can modify and improve mental
skills. But most efforts at helping students with learning problems
still ignore this knowledge. Instead, many people try to modify
the student's environment.
There are numerous studies that show this modification is possible.
The following is just a sample of these studies supporting the
fact that a wide range of mental skills can be - and have
been - improved.
Using a program aimed at developing reasoning and figural classification
skills, Jacobs showed a measurable improvement
in these skills, a better retention rate, and a transfer of skills
to related tasks.
Meichenbaum was able to improve mental performance
in a variety of therapeutic situations by modifying the inner
speech patterns of children and adults, which shows that learning
and memory skills can be trained.
Blank revealed IQ gains of 14.5 points in a
one-on-one program that lasted 75 minutes per week over several
months. The IQ gains dropped to only seven points when the amount
of training was reduced to 45 minutes per week.
Bloom and Broder, using an individualized problem-solving
training program, obtained significant gains in grades if there
were more than seven sessions.
Lindamood reported individual reading gains
averaged 2.4 years in a four-month period for eighth and ninth
graders who received auditory-conceptual training.
Greenspan showed a significant improvement in
directionality and a reduction of reversal errors after using
perceptual-motor training.
Impressive training results have also been documented by Feuerstein,
Holzman, and Trabasso for reasoning;
Belmont, Brown, and Wanschura
for memory; Klahr and Siegler
for problem solving; Farr, Hendrickson,
Walsh, Brown, Getz,
Halliwell, Rowell, and Rosner
for visual processing; and Peters, Rose,
Yates, Varner, and Turner
for auditory processing.
Click here for study results of the
PACE program.. The results not only show tremendous changes in
processing skills (a 3.6 year improvement in 10 weeks), but also
a significant transfer to higher mental skills (a 23-point gain
in IQ).
Neurobiologically-based facts and scientific studies show how
skills can be modified. But the question of how training exercises
can benefit everyday life remains. The answer is transfer.
Transfer occurs when a person applies some previously gained
knowledge to a new situation that requires a similar task. For
example, a person who learns to play a card game can apply this
knowledge to help him or her learn how to play other card games.
The first game teaches the person how many points cards typically
are worth, how the cards are typically divided among players,
which cards may be considered "trump," and the value
order of the cards. If a person can learn these rules that are
common to most card games, he or she will find learning unfamiliar
card games easier.
The same is true for mental training. A student who learns how
to use visualization to remember a list of presidents will be
able to use this same strategy to help him or her remember a story
or spelling list as well. And a student who learns to do two or
three tasks at one time (such as count by three while following
a moving object and clapping in beat) will be able to listen to
a teacher and take notes at the same time. Each skill learned
in PACE will transfer to help the student perform other activities
that use the same skill.
Not only is this transfer "horizontal" (similar tasks),
but it is also "vertical" (affecting higher mental skills).
If a person learns a skill that a higher mental skill is dependent
upon, that higher mental skill may be improved as well. In other
words, a student who learns to process information faster, concentrate
more, visualize, remember, and conceptualize auditory patterns
better will find learning much easier and faster. PACE targets
the processing skills that academic skills rely upon to make learning
easier and more efficient for the student. Then the student will
no longer have to learn to process, but can process to learn.
See parent and student comments.