Common questions from parents

Is the left-brain/right-brain theory true at all?

Not in the way it is popularly used. Particular functions do lateralize, such as language tending to sit on the left, but a large 2013 imaging study of over a thousand people found no one runs on a dominant hemisphere. No child is logical or creative because of which “side” they use.

My child is clearly more artistic than analytical. Doesn’t that prove they are right-brained?

It shows a preference and a set of practiced strengths, not a hardwired brain type. Interests and skills grow from experience and repetition. A child who draws constantly is building those circuits, not revealing a fixed lane, and the same brain grows in math with the right practice.

If the theory is wrong, why do schools and quizzes still use it?

Because debunked ideas are sticky. The same thing happened with “learning styles,” disproven in 2008 yet still taught widely. A label that sounds scientific spreads faster than its correction.

Should I worry that a learning difference is behind my child’s struggle?

A specific, lasting struggle is worth understanding, and a parent screener is a useful starting point for seeing where to focus. A screener is a starting point, not a diagnosis. If your child might need formal accommodations like an IEP or 504 plan, or you suspect a vision, hearing, or medical cause, pursue a professional evaluation too, as that is the only route to those supports.

How do I support my child’s brain without picking a “side”?

Give a wide range of experiences and let strengths and challenges both get attention. Praise effort and strategy over talent, keep difficulty within reach rather than removing it, and treat every subject as learnable. A whole brain grows best on a whole diet.