FastForWord, Computer-based training programs from Scientific Learning use the latest brain research and technology to improve learning skills dramatically in just weeks instead of years.

Solidly Based in Neuroscience Research

Scientists have discovered that the brain can continue to develop throughout life and that our brains can be "rewired" through intensive training to improve skills basic to all learning.

Trains the Brain to Learn Faster and Better

Through intensive computer-based training that is precisely calibrated to the individual, students develop core language and reading skills rapidly and efficiently.

Dramatic Gains in Weeks, Not Years

These powerful programs systemically target the skills critical for oral language and reading, yielding gains of 1-3 years in just 4-8 weeks.

Scientifically Validated to Work

Rigorous independent studies and the experience of over 30,000 students confirm the effectiveness of these programs.

Auditory Integration Training (AIT) is a hearing training process for sensory input anomalies found in individuals with autism, autistic-like behaviors, pervasive developmental disorder, attention deficit disorders, dyslexia, learning disabilities and hearing sensitivity difficulties. AIT has received much notoriety following the release of "The Sound of a Miracle" by Annabel Stehli who describes before and after AIT experiences with her daughter, Georgiana, who was diagnosed as having autism at age four.

The Audiokinetron modulates or randomizes high and low frequency sounds, as well as intensity levels, reducing one's ability to predict an incoming auditory signal. Additionally, the equipment is capable of filtering frequencies which may be deemed necessary by the practitioner, based on information gathered during an audiological assessment. Implementation of the modulation and filtering process is presented in twenty half-hour sessions, twice a day, with a least three hours between sessions. During training, participants are listening to a modified musical program. The AIT process, by its unpredictable nature, reduces sound sensitivity and improves perception of all incoming auditory information.