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Movement Education:
Is not a subject, it is child development on the elementary level.


Developing Better Learners – A Celebration of Success
By: Siegfried Gerstung

It’s bean more than half a century ago that I started to study young children and how they learn through movement. My focus has always been on Rhythmic, Movement Education, and Educational Gymnastics, and I have studied children over the past 46 years in schools and at the Gerstung Movement Learning Center in Baltimore, Md. There we teach movement skills and develop confident learners. It is my firm conclusion that the way children learn before they are students has a lot to do with the type of students they become. I have seen how children have grown into self-confident adults that have good judgment. I know it is all about developing intellectually and physically at the same time, and it must happen in the elementary schools, where we create the foundation for good learning. Only Movement Education can teach what writing, reading, and arithmetic can not. What we physically experience, we usually keep for life, and developing the intellect through movement (that’s what kids do best) is simply a whole lot more fun.

But, what is the secrete behind Movement Education that some educators do not understand? If they refer to it as learning through movement on the elementary level, I would consider this a very good answer, because that’s where it should be found, and that’s where it must be taught.

After many years of searching for a good answer I came to the conclusion that all of us who are in this field of specialty are trying to explain the characteristics, the teaching methodology, the values and benefits of this subject. In fact, it is not a subject at all; it is clear and simple Progressive Child Development. It is all about how children learn and how they become better learners before they turn into students, and this must be embraced by any educational institution, encouraged by parents, and teachers alike!

But why do young children learn faster through Movement Education and what do they learn that the class room teacher can not accomplish very well? First of all we must become aware of how we teach and what we tell our children to do. Actually, as movement educators we do not tell our students anything; we put our demand or request in form of a question and expect a “movement answer”. Then we keep asking, “is there an other way?” We want the child to be totally involved,
focusing on the task, the problem, and the question. The child must experience what is relatively easy, what is difficult, simple, and challenging. The child explores personal limits and abilities. While we are striving for our students to become skill full, physically accomplished, and as perfect as necessary, we are not teaching a subject, we teach the child. The motivation factor is fun and competition only exists in relation to ones own ability, not indirect comparison to someone else. Challenging independent thinking, responding, discovering, and creating demands a higher then usual level of participation with both sides of the brain, not just the body. We encourage learning through guided discoveries and not through responding to commands. The learner explores and experiences, gains knowledge and becomes self-confident. The child celebrates accomplishment, we call it fun. Let’s not forget how children learn.

During the most playful and playable years, kids learn from their environment and develop in accordance to what information they have stored. Such information was not presented to them as facts, for it to become matter of fact knowledge, is an action and an experience for the moment, and how that information was experienced becomes knowledge and is stored in memory. Of course, it was first experienced Physically, through movement.

Learning is a fundamental process of repetitiously acquired information, physically and/or cognitively, that the brain stores as knowledge. Most of what we have learned in school we have not been able to retain (unless we are using school skills in our day-to-day life). A lot of what we have explored physically we still remember. That is why brain researchers draw differences between how we learn and what we store in memory. Although learning and memory are not exactly the same, one can not exist with out the other.

Movement Education provides the interaction between discovery and memory. It also creates the ever so important environment for better learning. We often neglect to understand or to pay attention to the environment of the growing stages of a child and how intensively they interact with their environment (i.e. young teenagers).

The earlier we are able to give the child a fun learning environment, they earlier child and teachers can celebrate success. Here are the 25 most significant contributions Movement Education can make outside the classroom to the developing child:

1. Reinforcing good listening skills
2. Developing a “movement vocabulary”
3. Responding to problems with movement answers
4. Building creativity through physical expressions
5. Responding to problems with movement answers
6. Practicing decision making abilities
7. Learning to understand and solve problems
8. Expanding on imagination
9. Expanding efficiencies
10. Learning to think ahead of the action and execution
11. Understanding questions, problems, and tasks
12. Practicing how to express oneself
13. Developing images and visions
14. Rethinking actions, possibilities, and consequences
15. Becoming knowledgeable to evaluate situations
16. Learning to value quality in perfection
17. Not being hesitant of trying something new
18. Learning to finish for completion
19. Discovering growth and satisfaction (fun)
20. Investing in determination, effort, and integrity
21. Gaining self-confidence and self-esteem
22. Feeling safe in assuming responsibilities for self and others
23. Applying knowledge and experience
24. Executing independent thinking and leadership
25. Becoming accomplished and above all, a better learner with a stronger body and healthier min, worth celebrating.

You can find Siegfried Gerstung, at Gerstung Inter-Sport at 410/337-7781 of sg@gerstung.com.

AWARDS:
2008 Maryland Family Magazine:
Best Summer Camp
Best Place to Throw a Party
Best Dance School
Best Gymnastics Program
Best Story Time

2007 Baltimore Magazine:

Best Rainy Day Activity for Kids
2006 Maryland Family Magazine:
Best Gymnastics Program
2005 Maryland Family Magazine:
Best Summer Camp
Best Place to Throw a Party
Best After School Program
Best Gymnastics Program
Best Programs or Activity for Preschoolers
2004 Club Industry:
Best of the Best Children's Programming
2003 Baltimore Magazine:
Best Gym for Kids