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Janet Doman is the director of The Institutes and Glenn's daughter. She was actively involved in helping brain-injured children by the time she was nine years old, and after completing her studies at the University of Pennsylvania, devoted herself to helping parents discover the vast potential of their babies and their own potential as teachers.
SusanAisen is the former director of The Institutes for theAchievement of Human Potential. She has served the children of the world inseven foreign countries and in the United States. As former director of TheInstitute, Aisen has been responsible for both The Evan Thomas Institute (ofwhich she was the second director, having succeeded Janet Doman in that post)and the Institute that is responsible for creating high levels of intelligencein the hundreds of brain-injured children seen by The Institutes. She is aninternational lecturer on the subject of intelligence in children, on which sheis an authority. Awards for her work with children include the Gold Medal ofHonor (Brazil), the Star of Hope (England), and the Sakura koro sho Medal(Japan).
Glenn Doman received his degree in physical therapy from the University of Pennsylvania in 1940. From that point on, he began pioneering the field of child brain development. In 1955, he founded The Institutes' world-renowned work with brain-injured children had led to vital discoveries regarding the growth and development of well children. The author has lived with, studied, and worked with children in more than one hundred nations, ranging from the most civilized to the most primitive. Doman is also the international best-selling author of six books, all part of the Gentle Revolution Series, including How To Teach Yor Baby To Read, How To Teach Your Baby Math, and How To Give Your Baby Encyclopedic Knowledge.
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