Kinesthetic Learning Style

Early Learning and Brain Development: Body-Smart

This month is Autism Awareness Month. Autism is not something we can see from the outside looking in and currently, there are far more questions than answers. The brain and how it works is mysterious and amazing. That raises another question: What are some ways to encourage brain development in all children? Here are some encore posts on young children, kindergarten readiness, and multiple intelligence.

Body-Smart:

You put your right hand in, you put your right hand out. You put your right hand in for kinder-gar-ten read-i-ness. You do the Hockey-Pokey and develop brains and that’s what it’s all about!
body-smart-activities
And that really is what kindergarten readiness is about. Developing kindergarten readiness tags along with developing children’s brains and all their multiple intelligences. Bodily-kinesthetic intelligence is body-smart in kids’ words. This seems to be a natural for kids; when are they ever not moving? But some children will crawl and walk much earlier than others and go on to develop a good sense of timing and well coordinated movements. Whether this seems to be a strength or a challenge for your child, all children need opportunities to explore what their bodies can do and ways they move and position in space. Some of these might be:

  • having a space where kids can move safely; a yoga mat makes floors softer for rolling around
  • playing some music for dancing and movement exploration
  • building with different kinds of construction toys
  • hopping, jumping, tiptoeing, sliding, walking and runnnning to catch the bus
  • body-smart-activitiesputting together puzzles of different difficulty levels
  • squishing play-dough
  • digging in the sand box
  • splashing around in water
  • saving some clothes that munchkins can use for dress-up and imaginative play, not just dresses but a few hockey shirts or sports clothes for both boys and girls

body-smart-activitiesCheck and see if your community has some gym time for tots with balance benches, balls, hoops, and mats or other fun programs. An entire house can seem too small for kids’ energy levels so some space and time at the playground or park allows them to explore sliding, stepping, reaching, running, climbing, and more (and hopefully channels that energy). Moving promotes the development of all kinds of neural connections. Talk with your child too about how different sensations and ways to move feel. Encouraging movement helps kids grow brains and promotes kindergarten readiness. How will you help your child become body-smart and even smarter?

Kindergarten Readiness – Brains & Kinesthetic Learning Style

Developing kindergarten readiness includes supporting different ways to learn. Even now, are some things easier for you to learn than others? Brains have different ways to learn, a sort of learning personality. These preferences and individual strengths in the way we learn are called learning styles. Generally, there are 3 basic learning styles: visual, auditory and kinesthetic.
kinesthetick-learning-style
While all children are hands-on, kinesthetic learners like to move as they learn. These children are doers, often wiggling or tapping at the same time. As they talk, their hands and the rest of their bodies may be “talking”, too. They like to touch and feel and move their bodies. These children like to take things apart and put them back together, smoosh play dough and move their bodies. Often, these are the kids that like to go faster and higher in the swings and especially enjoy places like community gyms and pools.

Support for kinesthetic learners needs to be two fold, that is providing ways to move, touch, and do, and encouraging different ways to learn. Songs that have actions will be more appealing, as well as books that have textures in addition to words and pictures. Puppets are a toy that combines hands-on and talking. Exploring different ways to learn promotes kindergarten readiness and increases brain connections. Do you think your child has a kinesthetic learning style?

Kindergarten Readiness – Body-Smart Activities for Kids

You put your right hand in, you put your right hand out. You put your right hand in for kinder-gar-ten read-i-ness. You do the Hockey-Pokey and develop brains and that’s what it’s all about!
body-smart-activities
And that really is what kindergarten readiness is about. Developing kindergarten readiness tags along with developing children’s brains and all their multiple intelligences. Bodily-kinesthetic intelligence is body-smart in kids’ words. This seems to be a natural for kids; when are they ever not moving? But some children will crawl and walk much earlier than others and go on to develop a good sense of timing and well coordinated movements. Whether this seems to be a strength or a challenge for your child, all children need opportunities to explore what their bodies can do and ways they move and position in space. Some of these might be:

  • having a space where kids can move safely; a yoga mat makes floors softer for rolling around
  • playing some music for dancing and movement exploration
  • building with different kinds of construction toys
  • hopping, jumping, tiptoeing, sliding, walking and runnnning to catch the bus
  • body-smart-activitiesputting together puzzles of different difficulty levels
  • squishing play-dough
  • digging in the sand box
  • splashing around in water
  • saving some clothes that munchkins can use for dress-up and imaginative play, not just dresses but a few hockey shirts or sports clothes for both boys and girls

body-smart-activitiesCheck and see if your community has some gym time for tots with balance benches, balls, hoops, and mats or other fun programs. An entire house can seem too small for kids’ energy levels so some space and time at the playground or park allows them to explore sliding, stepping, reaching, running, climbing, and more (and hopefully channels that energy). Moving promotes the development of all kinds of neural connections. Talk with your child too about how different sensations  and ways to move feel. Encouraging movement helps kids grow brains and promotes kindergarten readiness. How will you help your child become body-smart and even smarter?

Kindergarten Readiness – Getting In Shape For Holidays

What shape should we get in? The different meanings for the word shape and the play on words is a great reminder that kids (and adults) need to play. For some playtime today, exercise the body in different shapes: make circles with different parts of the body, bend arms and legs like triangles, stand and … Continue reading Kindergarten Readiness – Getting In Shape For Holidays

Kindergarten Readiness – Memory by Touch

I’ll start today’s blog with a quick confession. I love mystery stories and avoid being bookless. Bookless does not mean I haven’t quite a collection, just that I don’t have one to read next. One that I really enjoyed was Memory Book by Howard Engel. A detective suffers a brain injury and significant memory loss. … Continue reading Kindergarten Readiness – Memory by Touch