Identify your child's learning style
Howard Gardner identified 8 primary learning styles in his Theory of Multiple Intelligences. Some argue there are many more. Explore the way different children learn, find out how your child learns best and identify ways to support their growth. Discover tools and experts who can evaluate your child’s approach to learning and tools to help them thrive.
STEAM (Science, Tech, Engineering, Arts, Math)
STEAM stands for Science, Technology, Education, Arts and Mathematics. Learn where you can find resources to support your child’s STEAM skills through local classes, museums, online resources, and more! Unlike “STEM,” STEAM, includes the arts as many educators view creativity as a critical skill for 21st century thinkers and doers!
Project-based Instruction
Project-based instruction is an approach to learning - through doing. It is a multi-disciplinary approach to learning that brings meaning and inspiration to the learning process. When children are focused on a project or goal, they are able to acquire multiple skills at the same time. It is an approach that emulates real life in that children must push through frustrations, learn skills necessary to achieve their skills, cope with failure and follow their mission in pursuit of a goal that’s significant to them.
Social-Emotional Development
Healthy social interaction is critical to a child’s healthy intellectual, social and emotional development. Play teaches social cognition, spatial awareness, creativity, communication skills and so much more! A longitudinal study at Harvard Institute for Play demonstrated that children who engaged in play in preschool were actually more likely to succeed academically than children who were taught academics. Discover resources to meet families who share your values, help your child cultivate healthy social relationships and nurture their natural love of play!
Self-Directed Education
Children come into this world with a mind like a sponge and an insatiable desire to learn about the world, so how can we support their curiosity and allow it to flourish? Research shows that giving children a significant amount of space and time to pursue subjects that are of interest to them at their own rate and in their own way can be hugely beneficial, if not indispensable to their intellectual development. Any parent who has ever witnessed their child learning something they are excited about- whether it’s memorizing the name of every dinosaur or asking you to re-read the same book 50 times - knows the power of self-directed learning! Giving children space for self-directed learning also prepares children to be independent thinkers, preserve their natural love of learning and help them grow into autonomous adults, the movers and shapers of tomorrow!