LEGO® and home-schooling - How building blocks can be used around the home to educate our kid's.

LEGO is a great tool for parents who are home-schooling their children. These toys offer a variety of educational benefits that can help kids develop their skills across multiple subjects and activities. In this post, we'll explore how parents can use LEGO to enhance their kids' education and how these toys can help children develop in unique ways in a home schooled environment.

The Unique Benefits of LEGO in Education

LEGO offers a hands-on approach to learning that can help kids develop critical thinking skills, problem-solving abilities, and creativity. When kids use LEGO, they are challenged to imagine, design, and construct their own creations, which can help them develop their cognitive abilities.

For example, parents can use LEGO to help younger children learn about shapes, colours, and sizes by having them sort and match different bricks. The bricks are also great for maths, basic addition and subtraction are particularly great ways to use bricks to teach the fundamentals.
Older kids can use LEGO to build more complex structures, such as a model of a bridge or a motorized car, which can help them understand concepts like engineering and physics, and be tied to physic related challenges like supporting a set weight or object which it performs and action, like rolling a cricket ball over a gap between two table surfaces.
Parents can also use LEGO to teach kids about history, geography, and culture by having them recreate famous buildings, landmarks, and monuments.

The Secondary Benefits of LEGO

In addition to the educational benefits of LEGO, these toys also offer other benefits that can help children develop important skills. For example, using LEGO can help kids improve their dexterity, hand-eye coordination, and fine motor skills.

Playing with LEGO also fosters creativity and imagination. Bricktastics products in particular with their open-ended creative focus enable children to create whatever they want, and this can help them develop their own unique sense of style and aesthetic. LEGO also encourages kids to work together and collaborate, which can help them develop social skills and build teamwork skills. Parents can use LEGO to promote teamwork by having their children work together to build a structure or complete a challenge.

LEGO for Autistic Children and Kids on the Spectrum

LEGO can be especially beneficial for autistic children and kids on the spectrum. These toys offer a structured and predictable environment that can help these children feel more secure and comfortable. They can also help these kids develop their fine motor skills and improve their hand-eye coordination, and are a great for developing proprioception.

In addition, LEGO can be used as a form of therapy for autistic children. For example, parents might use LEGO to help their autistic child develop their communication skills by having them describe their creation or to build social skills by having them work with other children to build a structure. Parents can also use LEGO to help their autistic children develop their social skills by having them play with other children or by working together as a family to build a structure. We have also seen educators use the minifigures to talk about and represent emotional states and social interaction role playing.

Conclusion

LEGO is a great tool for parents who are home-schooling their children. Bricktastics specifically designs its product offerings with this in mind. With our focus on creativity and endless lucky dip variety we offer a numerous educational benefits that can help kids develop their skills across multiple subjects and activities. They also offer secondary benefits, such as improved dexterity, creativity, and imagination, and can be especially beneficial for autistic children and kids on the spectrum. Whether used for educational purposes at home or just for fun, LEGO is a great way for kids to learn, grow, and have fun at the same time in a  home schooled environment.