Why you should play more with LEGO.
a) When you play with small bricks, you are training the
little muscles in your fingers and hands. This is called your fine motor
control. Having good fine motor control makes your colouring and your
handwriting better.
b) Let your imagination run loose with your friends. When
you build your houses, castles, volcanos, ancient temples, garages, ships, you
are making up stories in your head, you become the creator. You will learn how
to play with others, to collaborate and make something together. It is very
much like writing a story with a good friend. Or maybe another boy or girl who
will become your good friend. How good is that?
c) That feeling you get when you finish a piece. The feeling
of ‘YAY, I made this!’ A very happy feeling that makes you feel good about
yourself.
d) Playing with LEGO teaches you resilience. You have to
have patience, you need to look for the right brick, and you will make
mistakes, so you will go back and fix that little error.
e) You develop a skill for problem solving. A mass of
differently coloured and differently shaped bricks turn into an object or an
animal. Making sense of a chaos of coloured bricks is like solving a puzzle.
f) LEGO keeps you calmer. Just like when you play Jenga, you
need to have calm hands so that none of the bricks get lost.
f) STEAM. Science, technology, engineering, art,
mathematics. You have it all in one special box.
Next time you write that letter to Santa, make sure you
include the best four letter word there is: LEGO.
Until then, you can come up
to our class and take part in LEGO club.