The student-facing report is a strengths-based summary designed to help learners in Grade 5 and above understand how they learn best. It removes numerical scores and focuses instead on accessible language and visual cues, making it appropriate for building self-awareness, self-advocacy, and effective study habits. At Verbs, we use this report to encourage meaningful reflection and to support students in taking ownership of their learning process. It’s a powerful tool for helping students recognize what comes naturally and where they may need to apply more effort—with no judgment, only insight.
Student Learner Profile
Learner Name: Learner
Test Date: 00/00/00
School: Verbs
Below is your MindPrint Profile. It lists your skills in each category in order of strength. Your strongest skill is listed first in each category. You also have a strongest overall category. It’s the highlighted tall box below. When you are faced with a challenge you will always want to start with your strengths. The strategies below will help you use your strengths.
The last skill in each category could be a “blocker” and make learning challenging at times, but you can always find ways to use your strengths to succeed. Since Executive Functions can be the biggest blocker, in that category we give a strategy to help minimize any challenge.
How you learn new concepts
Learn how to use your top strength
Remembering information
Learn how to use your top strength
Organizing & Completing Work
Learn how to use your top strength
Subject checklist: Use these checklists to help you do your best work.
Reading Checklist
Writing Checklist
Math Checklist
Here’s a prioritized list of strategies to get you started by subject and skill based on your MindPrint Profile. You can find many more by searching your Toolbox.
MindPrint Student Learner Profile: Discovering Your Strengths (Lesson 3)
Memorizing for Efficiency
Subject # 3
Complex Reasoning is your ability to understand and analyze new information, and solve problems. You take in new information in a variety of ways, most often reading, hearing, seeing, and visualizing.
Memory is how efficiently you memorize new information and recall it over time. Weaker memory can be offset by spaced practice and effective strategy use.
Executive Functions & Speed refer to how accurately, efficiently, and systematically you can complete your assignments (regardless of how well you know and understand the information).