Glassman Genesis jews d in the Valet Service Jeff Stewart Assistant New Car Sales Manager Serving the Community Since 1969 248-636-2736 Finding The Key Complimentary Maintenance For 50 years, educator helps students learn their own way. Serving Our Community For Over 45 Years! 5FMFHSBQI3Et4PVUIýFMEt XXXHMBTTNBOHFOFTJTDPN 2168010 2017 Audi Q5 2.0T Premium Plus Special Lease Progress is never blending in. $ 429 mo* 36 mo. lease $3,774 due at signing Magna Society Audi Sylvania 5570 Monroe St. | Sylvania, OH www.sylvaniaaudi.com The Paint Store 248-745-3100 Full Line Paint Store *Based on MSRP of $44,100 (incluiding destination charges). $3,774 due at signing, plus taxes, title, options & dealer charges. $0 security deposit. For qualified customers who lease through AFS. Lessee responsible for 25¢/mi. over 30,000 miles. Subject to credit approval. See Audi Sylvania for complete details. Offer expires 5/31/17. Decorator Assistance Come and check us out! Benjamin Moore Paint Starting as low as $15.83 per gallon 1001 Orchard Lake Rd. Pontiac, MI 48341 www.thepaintstoremi.com FREE Brush and Roller with purchase of a gallon of paint. Limit 4 per person. Conveniently located at the corner of Orchard Lake and Old Telegraph Rd. 12 May 25 • 2017 jn JOYCE WISWELL SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS L ynne Master, M.Ed., has learned a lot in the 50 years since she founded the Learning Disabilities Clinic (LDC) in Oak Park. The biggest lesson of all? There is no such thing as a person who can’t learn. “We cannot write off any child — or anybody else — as a lost cause. There is no such thing,” Master said. “I can’t say that everyone can learn as much as everyone else, but everyone can learn.” Master has devoted her career to proving it. She founded LDC in 1968 to diagnose and treat learning dis- orders in all ages. Students include special needs children with traumatic brain injuries, autistic spectrum disor- ders, learning disabilities, hearing and visual impairments, and emotional problems. LDC also provides special education staffing to schools and designs programs to improve reading and math skills, especially for chil- dren below the poverty level in failing schools. Master turns 77 this month, but has no plans to slow down. “I have never stopped enjoying it and, when all my friends started retiring, I real- ized I didn’t want to stop,” said the Huntington Woods resident. She’s not sure how many students she’s seen over the years, but admits to “about 12 filing cabinets full of kids. And now what is thrilling,” she added, “is that I am getting the children of my students.” It is the responsibility of every teacher, Master believes, to figure out how each student processes informa- tion. “When I started teaching, at 19 in 1959, I had 45 children in my class- room,” she said. “And they were suc- cessful. I grouped them together and taught them in a way that was inter- esting to them.” She was fearless, too. Master was not shy about making impromptu home visits despite the impoverished neighborhood in Highland Park. “Some of these mothers were prosti- tutes. I never saw a rat in my life until I paid a home visit,” she said. “The mothers were shocked that I showed up, but I said, ‘You didn’t show up for Lynne Master works with Moshe Waxenberg, 23, of Oak Park, who is studying math education at Wayne State University to become a teacher. the parent conference and we have to work together as a team.’” Her motto: “Competence brings confidence.” The approach paid off and her students learned to love learning, including subjects no one else was attempting like Shakespeare, poetry and Spanish. LDC, the nation’s only education clinic with the same accreditation as public schools, has also helped adults overcome hurdles, including a dentist who could not pass his written exams and an attorney who kept failing the bar. Master is a past national presi- dent of the Education Industry Association and a former president of the Birmingham Temple. She was part of the inner circle of Rabbi Sherwin T. Wine, founder of the Society for Humanistic Judaism and the International Institute for Secular Humanistic Judaism. Master served as president of both organizations. Master said she remembers each student who has passed through LDC over the decades. “I take it all into my heart. One child with leukemia said, ‘I have to learn as much as I can before I die.’ You can’t not take that home with you,” she said. “That child did die, and it still hurts me to this day.” • LDC celebrates its 50th anniversary with an open house 2-5 p.m. Sunday, June 4, at 25611 Coolidge in Oak Park. Visit ldclinic.com.