There is no learning without the body
When children use ActiveFloor, learning becomes embodied and concrete.
They can spell using their bodies by jumping on letters. They can work with numbers, geography, and other subject areas by moving in a learning space where concepts are not only heard – but also seen and enacted.
Ole highlights three crucial effects of embodied learning:
1) Learning becomes an active action – not passive reception
The concept of “instruction” suggests that knowledge can be poured into children. Instead, learning is described as something that happens when the child is actively engaged in the process. When the body is involved, learning becomes both an action and a form of understanding.
2) Motivation arises because children do not experience it as practice
Ole emphasizes that children often train academic skills without experiencing it as repetition or obligation. They participate in an activity that feels meaningful and fun, while their academic competencies are strengthened at the same time.
3) More children gain access to the subject matter
Children learn in different ways: some remember best what they hear, others what they see. What they have in common is that when the body is activated, the likelihood of learning “sticking” increases – while learning also becomes more inclusive.