To Teachers Who Want To Use Mnemonic Movement Cues — But Aren’t Sure How to Get Started

Movement is critical to enhancing a student’s educational experience! It keeps students alert and awake, increases the flow of blood to the brain, and creates a medium for memory associations.

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Movement in the Classroom

Movement is a Powerful Memory Strategy! Click for more stock photos

Unfortunately, movement is often underutilized in the classroom. Why? There may be many reasons, including a lack of familiarity on the part of the teacher. Active educational activities, the idea that movement is ‘too disruptive’ for the students, and lack of time in a test-driven educational world are common challenges. To help overcome these and other obstacles, guest contributor Fritz Bell, includes 12 time efficient, easy-to-implement movement ideas that you can use in your classroom.

Total Body Learning: Movement & Academics

Many of the students in your class are Bodily-Kinesthetic learners.  They learn through their bodies and they need to move.  They wiggle and squirm.  The following ideas can help make movement be a positive learning force in your classroom.

1.  Have your students act out vocabulary words with their bodies.  This will give them a visual picture to remember their words.

2.  Have the class clap out the syllables in the names of their classmates or their vocabulary words. This is a great strategy for helping kids remember long and multisyllabic words.

3.  Put vocabulary words on individual cards and pass them out to the class.  Then have them move around the room and, at a signal from you, form groups (of five or less, depending on grade level and vocabulary) and line up in alphabetical order.

4.  Have students use an object such as a pencil and hold it in, under, over, next to, beside, or above their desk to act out prepositions.

5.  Give each student a number from one to nine.  Have them walk around the room, then call out a product such as “14.” The students must pair up with the other number(s) that will add up to that product.  This movement activity can be used for subtraction and multiplication also.

6.  Mark a ladder on the floor with tape and have students ‘step’ up and down the ladder to practice their subtraction skills.

7.  Tie yard-long pieces of yarn into a circle.  Have students, in pairs, practice shapes (right triangles, diamond, trapezoid, etc) with the yarn.

8.  Use Edwin M. Liberthal’s book, The Complete Book of Fingermath to help your students learn math.

9.  Have your students pretend that they are the center rod of a globe.  Have them show longitude, latitude, the equator, etc on their globes.  For instance, if the USA is on their chests have them show where is Europe, Africa, or Australia are located.

10.  Through movement, have students mimic the different states of matter; liquid, gas, and solid.

11.  To teach the concepts of classification, group students together by some sort of classification, such as who are wearing glasses and those aren’t.  The student who figures out the classification first gets to try one of their own.

12.  Vote with your feet! Put a topic, decision, location, answer, political agenda, etc. on opposite sides of the room. Ask students  to choose one side or the other in answer to a question. For example, if you’ve just completed a study of Greece, put Athens on one side and Sparta on the other. Have students stand under the sign of the community they want to live in. Tell them to be prepared to explain their choice.

Dare To Use Mnemonic Movement Cues to Energize and Engage your Students

Movement in the classroom will re-energize your students and minimize discipline issues that result from children not being able to move.  It will provide your ADD/ADHD students with learning experiences that address their primary intelligence and provide all your students with researched, brain-centered learning activities.  Try it.  It works!

Watch the video: How To Teach Mnemonic Movement Cues so Students Learn More!

Here’s a couple examples of using movement and music to teach math and grammar:

Math:

https://www.teachingchannel.org/videos/teaching-symmetry-with-dance

 

Grammar:

Have your students create the song/movement mnemonic like these teens did:

__________

Fritz Bell is known for his lively, hands-on, practical workshops and courses. He emphasizes learning by doing and makes it fun to learn new concepts and new methods.  He has taught at all levels from Head Start through graduate school, across the country, as well as Australia and Canada.  He is on the staff of both Lesley University and Plymouth State University in addition to being the Director of Creative Classrooms at Walnut Hill in Raymond, NH.  Mr. Bell is the author of the book, Total Body Learning:  Movement and Academics.
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Susan Fitzell
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