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Developer of Learning Systems

Expressways To Learning® systems are the products of over thirty years of intensive, continuous research, development and field testing by Dr. Jack E. Hoes.

 

Awarded Multimedia Fellowship

In 1968 the first Experienced Teachers Fellowship Program was offered through the combined auspices of the U.S. Office of Education, the Hawaiian Department of Education and the University of Hawaii for the purpose of training multimedia personnel for leadership as specialists to develop new and innovative programs. It was understood that the highest degree earned would be a masters, even though the work required would be at the doctoral level. Of the 1,700 applicants for fellowships, Jack Hoes was the first of twenty chosen.

Worked with Renowned Researchers

The U.S. Office of Education, Washington D.C. provided the country’s foremost pioneers in multimedia education, early childhood development, and problems of children with learning deficits: Dr. Barbara Bateman, authority on exceptional children; Dr. S.N. Postlethwait, course organization for individualized instruction; Dr. Walter Wittich with his college textbook on audio-visual education (now 7th edition); Dr. Jeoffrey Kucera in educational television; Dr. Lindamood, auditory development specialist, who developed the ADD program; Dr. Arthur W. Staats in behavioral psychology; Dr. Mariane Frostig, visual motor training — all authors in their fields.

Working with such renowned researchers prepared Hoes to incorporate many disciplines in his design of Expressways To Learning® systems. Consequently the programs have proven highly effective for remediation of those with learning difficulties as well as for acceleration of regular and gifted students.

Master Teacher

 

His fifteen years in elementary education were in California and Hawaii. A master teacher, he led the fifth grade team-teaching unit for seven years and was the Educational Television Coordinator for his school.

A New Approach: A-VIP

He then developed a new and unique approach which he calls Auditory-Visual Impression Pairing (A-VIP). This was refined during three years of work at the Kainalu Learning Laboratory which he founded on windward Oahu. Words on slides housed in over 400 carousel trays took over two years to complete. It took three years of field testing to develop the Expressways To Reading® vocabulary and its proper neurological sequences.

During his three years as Director at KLL, Hoes continued studies in special education, finally accumulating over 100 graduate semester hours. Before A-VIP was discovered and developed, the NEA recognized thirteen learning theories.

Developed Computer Software

As soon as Radio Shack offered its first personal computer to the public in 1978, Hoes began programming his system on the TRS 80, Model I. Successively he programmed for the Apple and Atari computers. The first versions of Expressways To Reading® and Expressways To Math® were made available to the public in 1987.

Until 1989 Hoes did all his own programming. Then assistance was secured from other programmers. Since 1990 the programming has been supervised by Greg Corron, Senior Computer Systems Analyst. Thus clients have been provided with technical support and Dr. Hoes has been freed to continue refining and developing additional learning systems.

From 1991 to 1993 Expressways To Reading® was completely revised, incorporating the improvements indicated by experience in the field working with private learning centers, schools and industry.

Computer Technology

Hoes was the first to employ a tachistoscopic flash on a computer (1978) to impact the brain with visual stimuli and quickly pair it with auditory stimuli from another source. However, he had to wait years for the development of technology that could produce the kind of clear computer-generated audio needed to reproduce human speech for the many students with auditory discrimination problems.

Neuro-linguistic Programming

Although Dr. Hoes’ development of his reading system has been continuous for over thirty years, it is based on neuro-linguistic programming, a science that developed after Hoes had done years of careful experimentation and clinical research. As the neuroscientist William Rorick stated after evaluating Expressways To Reading®, "Dr. Hoes is a man ahead of his time. Expressways To Reading® is a brain-based approach to learning, getting the best results in the quickest time possible with long-term results."

Musical Compositions

Music is a very important part of Expressways To Reading®. Hoes’ doctorate, a D.D., is based on his years of work in religious education and church music. A gifted composer, Hoes has over 130 compositions in print. His music career has paralleled and been interwoven with his education career. All of the music in Expressways To Reading® was composed by Dr. Hoes.

The instrumentation and tempos of the music have been tested in the field for their effectiveness. The music is used to pace the student’s verbal responses. Research indicates that music helps to coordinate right-brain/left-brain functions.

Another critical factor that enhances learning is color. Expressways To Learning® programs for PC’s and Macintosh computers employ the latest discoveries in color research.