They Told You Your Child Is ‘Right-Brained.’ Here Is Why That Label Is Wrong, and What Actually Builds Brainpower
Somewhere along the way, a teacher, a quiz, or a well-meaning relative handed you a label for your child: ‘right-brained,’ the creative one, not wired for the logical stuff. So you started steering them toward the arts and away from anything that looked too analytical, half-believing their struggles were simply how their brain is built. Here is what the brain imaging actually shows: there is no such thing as a right-brained or a left-brained child. When researchers scanned more than a thousand brains, they found no children running on one hemisphere instead of the other. Your child is not broken, and they are not boxed into half a brain. The label was wrong, not them.
TL;DR
- There is no such thing as a 'left-brained' or 'right-brained' child; a 2013 study of more than a thousand brains found no one runs on a single dominant hemisphere.
- Specific functions do lateralize, and language usually sits on the left, but that is task by task, not a personality type, and both hemispheres work together constantly.
- The brain physically reorganizes with practice and experience throughout life, which is why a learning struggle is rarely fixed.
- Children's difficulties draw on several systems at once, including language, attention, memory, and processing speed, so building those underlying skills helps far more than choosing 'right-brain' activities.
- A child's abilities are something to develop, not a fixed type to work around.
Common questions from parents
Is my child left-brained or right-brained?
Neither, and no child is. When researchers scanned more than a thousand brains, they found no individuals running on one dominant hemisphere. Some functions do lean to one side, and language usually leans left, but that happens task by task, not as an overall brain type. The label tells you nothing useful about how to help your child.
If the left and right brain idea is a myth, why do teachers and quizzes still use it?
Because the belief is still widespread. In surveys, more than eight in ten educators across several countries still endorse hemisphere dominance. The science settled the question years ago, but classrooms have been slow to catch up. That gap is a systems problem, not a sign your child’s teacher means any harm.
Does this mean brain training and learning strategies do not matter?
The opposite. Because the brain reorganizes with practice, targeted work on the underlying skills, including attention, memory, language, and processing speed, genuinely changes how a child learns. What does not help is narrowing a child to ‘right-brain’ art activities and steering them away from everything else.
My child struggles in a specific subject. How do I tell what is actually going on?
Start by looking at the underlying skills a subject leans on rather than a brain-half label. A screener is a useful starting point for spotting patterns in reading or math, but it is a starting point, not a diagnosis. If your child might need formal accommodations such as an IEP or 504 plan, or you suspect a vision, hearing, or medical cause, pursue a professional evaluation too, since that is the only route to those supports.
What the infographic gets right, in plain language
The graphic lays out the popular story and then takes it apart. The myth comes in two halves: the ‘logical’ left brain that supposedly owns analysis and math, and the ‘creative’ right brain that supposedly owns art and intuition. Pop culture and media kept both halves alive long after the science moved on. Here is the reality the graphic points to, translated for a parent at the kitchen table:
- Nobody is half a brain. The two hemispheres are in near-constant conversation across a thick bundle of fibers called the corpus callosum. Most real thinking lights up both sides at once.
- Specialization is real, dominance is not. Some jobs do lean one way, and language usually leans left, but that is true task by task, not person by person. There is no overall ‘left-brained’ or ‘right-brained’ wiring.
- The brain is built to change. It reorganizes its structure in response to new experience and practice, across the whole lifespan. That is neuroplasticity, and it is the opposite of a fixed half-a-brain destiny.
If you have ever been told your struggling reader is ‘not a left-brain kid,’ that is the myth talking. A closer look at two brain myths that quietly limit children shows how often these tidy labels do more harm than the struggle itself.
Author Quote
“Your child was never half a brain. Specialization is real, dominance is a myth, and a developing brain is built to change.
” What the hemispheres actually do
Lateralization, the real phenomenon underneath the myth, means certain functions tend to concentrate on one side. In most people, the heavy lifting of spoken and written language sits in the left hemisphere, while aspects of attention, tone of voice, and reading a face lean right. That is genuine specialization. What it is not is a personality setting. In 2013, University of Utah researchers analyzed resting brain scans from more than a thousand people aged seven to twenty-nine and looked for individuals whose whole left or whole right network ran stronger. They did not find them. Lateralization turned out to be local, handled connection by connection, not a global stamp on who your child is.
This matters for learning because a child’s difficulty almost never lives in one tidy place. Reading, math, and writing each draw on several systems at once: language, working memory, attention, and processing speed. Strengthening the right underlying cognitive processing skills moves the needle far more than picking ‘right-brain’ activities. And those systems keep changing. Neuroplasticity research has watched gray matter physically grow when adults learned to juggle, and watched the memory centers of London taxi drivers enlarge as they learned the city’s streets. The brain your child has today is not the brain they are stuck with. A plain-language look at what neuroplasticity means for a struggling learner walks through what that growth looks like in practice.
Key Takeaways:
1No Dominant Hemisphere: Brain imaging of more than a thousand people found no one wired as left-brained or right-brained, which makes the label a myth.
2Specialization Without Dominance: Functions like language do lean to one side, but task by task, while both hemispheres stay in constant communication.
3Built to Change: The brain reorganizes itself with practice and experience, so a child's abilities are something to develop, not a fixed type.
Why the myth still runs the classroom
If the science settled this years ago, why does the label keep showing up on worksheets and parent-teacher nights? Because believing it is widespread, even among the people teaching our children. In surveys of educators across several countries, more than eight in ten still endorse the idea that differences between learners come down to left- or right-brain dominance. That is not a knock on teachers; it is a system that has been slow to update what it passes along. The cost lands on the child, who absorbs a quiet verdict about which half of their brain they were handed.
The healthier frame is the one the graphic ends on. A child’s abilities are something to develop, not a fixed type to manage around. That is where a growth mindset earns its place, and the research is honest about it: the gains are real but modest, and they show up most for the children who were struggling in the first place. Pair that belief with actual skill-building and you change both the wiring and the story a child tells about themselves. ‘I’m the creative one, not a math person’ is not a description of your child. It is a prediction, and every time they do the hard thing and succeed, they rewrite it. The same logic applies to whether a dyslexia or dyscalculia label sets a ceiling, and to what a bad grade teaches a child about who they are.
“Lateralization of brain connections appears to be a local rather than global property of brain networks, and the data are not consistent with a whole-brain phenotype of greater left-brained or greater right-brained network strength across individuals.” Adapted from Nielsen and colleagues, PLOS ONE, 2013.
Author Quote
“‘I’m the creative one, not a math person’ is not a fact about your child. It is a prediction, and every success quietly rewrites it.
” The villain here was never your child’s brain. It was a tidy label that told a whole generation of children which half of themselves to trust, and which half to give up on. You get to refuse that. The most important teacher your child will ever have does not need a neuroscience degree, only the right tools and the willingness to treat every ability as something that grows.
If you want a structured way to build the underlying brain skills the myth ignores, including attention, memory, processing, and flexible thinking, our Brain Bloom program trains them directly, the way neuroplasticity actually works.
And because a child’s struggles rarely travel alone, often tangling reading, focus, and confidence together, All Access gives you every Learning Success course and screener in one place, so you are ready to meet whatever your child actually needs, not the half a brain someone assigned them.
References
- Nielsen, J. A., Zielinski, B. A., Ferguson, M. A., Lainhart, J. E., & Anderson, J. S. (2013). An evaluation of the left-brain vs. right-brain hypothesis with resting state functional connectivity MRI. PLOS ONE, 8(8), e71275.
- Dekker, S., Lee, N. C., Howard-Jones, P., & Jolles, J. (2012). Neuromyths in education: Prevalence and predictors of misconceptions among teachers. Frontiers in Psychology, 3, 429.
- Macdonald, K., Germine, L., Anderson, A., Christodoulou, J., & McGrath, L. M. (2017). Dispelling the myth: Training in education or neuroscience decreases but does not eliminate beliefs in neuromyths. Frontiers in Psychology, 8, 1314.
- Draganski, B., et al. (2004). Changes in grey matter induced by training. Nature, 427, 311-312.
- Maguire, E. A., et al. (2000). Navigation-related structural change in the hippocampi of taxi drivers. PNAS, 97(8), 4398-4403.
- Sisk, V. F., Burgoyne, A. P., Sun, J., Butler, J. L., & Macnamara, B. N. (2018). To what extent and under which circumstances are growth mindsets important to academic achievement? Psychological Science, 29(4), 549-571.

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