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Educational Design: Mindful Movement for Children

When Movement Educates Attention

In recent years, the topic of children’s well-being has gained increasing prominence in educational debate. Children grow up immersed in an environment rich in stimuli, often fast-paced, fragmented, and characterized by a constant demand for attention. In this context, the body risks being reduced to a mere “container” of the mind, whereas neuroscience increasingly demonstrates that movement, emotions, learning, and cognitive regulation are deeply interconnected.

It is within this framework that mindful movement for children finds its place: a set of practices that combine physical movement, awareness, breathing, and intentional attention. These are not simply physical or sports activities, but experiences in which children are guided to perceive their own bodies, listen to their emotions, and develop a more balanced relationship with themselves and their environment.

Mindful movement can take various forms: mindful movement pathways, children’s yoga, breathing exercises combined with movement, box breathing practices, balance games, mindful walking, rhythmic activities, and slow coordination exercises. The goal is not performance, but experience. The body becomes a tool for knowledge, self-regulation, and growth.

Body, Brain, and Learning: What Neuroscience Tells Us

Educational neuroscience has highlighted that movement is not only beneficial for physical development but also represents a central element in cognitive and emotional maturation. Moving activates several brain areas simultaneously, including those involved in attention, memory, motor planning, and emotional regulation.

According to numerous studies on neurodevelopment, mindful motor experiences promote brain plasticity and contribute to the development of executive functions: abilities such as impulse control, concentration, cognitive flexibility, and the capacity to tolerate waiting. In children, these skills are fundamental both for personal well-being and for academic learning.

Mindful movement also introduces an element that is often overlooked in traditional physical activities: body awareness. When children pay attention to their breathing, the rhythm of their movements, or their physical sensations, the nervous system enters a more regulated state. Simple techniques such as box breathing, adapted into playful forms appropriate for different developmental stages, can help children slow down, regain a sense of calm, and improve their ability to concentrate. This may contribute to reducing agitation, stress, and sensory overload.

The relationship between emotions and movement also appears to be central. Many children express tension, frustration, or attentional difficulties through their bodies. Slow, rhythmic, and intentional activities help develop what is known as interoception, that is, the ability to perceive the internal signals of one’s own body. A child who can recognize their emotional state is better equipped to self-regulate and communicate their needs.

These practices are particularly valuable in inclusive and neurodivergent settings. Children with attentional difficulties, heightened sensory sensitivity, or special educational needs may benefit from activities that reduce the pressure of performance and instead honor and support each child’s individual pace.

Rethinking Movement in Contemporary Schools

In contemporary schools, movement is still too often confined to moments that are separate from teaching and learning: physical education classes, recess, or extracurricular sports activities. However, numerous educational experiences have shown that integrating the body into learning processes can improve the classroom climate and encourage more active participation.

Mindful movement allows us to rethink movement not as a “break” from learning, but as an integral part of the educational experience. Short practices involving breathing and mindful movement at the beginning of the school day can help children gradually enter a more stable state of attention. Activities inspired by box breathing can also become effective tools for promoting emotional regulation and mindful presence in the classroom. Likewise, brief physical exercises between activities can reduce cognitive overload and improve concentration.

Perhaps the most interesting aspect is the cultural shift implicit in these practices. In a society that values speed, performance, and constant stimulation, mindful movement restores importance to slowness, listening, and perception. Children are not encouraged to “do more,” but rather guided to feel more deeply and become more attuned to themselves.

This approach also resonates strongly with active pedagogies such as the Montessori method and the insights of Bruno Munari, in which the body, experimentation, and hands-on experience are considered essential tools for building authentic knowledge.

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Learning Unit (UDA) – “I Move, I Listen, I Learn”

Target Group: Primary school children (8–10 years old)
Duration: 8 hours.

Objectives

  • Develop bodily and emotional awareness.
  • Improve attention and self-regulation.
  • Foster coordination and mutual listening.
  • Integrate movement and learning.

Expected Competences

  • Recognize one’s own bodily and emotional state.
  • Participate in mindful movement activities.
  • Collaborate respectfully within a group.
  • Use basic breathing and relaxation techniques.

Activities

1. The Breathing Body

Children experiment with simple guided breathing exercises combined with slow movements of the arms and posture. A simplified version of box breathing is also introduced, using age-appropriate imagery and counting. The teacher uses evocative images (“inflate the balloon,” “move like a tree in the wind”) to facilitate participation.

2. Mindful Pathway

A motor pathway is set up using simple materials: ropes, hoops, sensory mats, and small obstacles. The goal is not speed but perception: walking slowly, listening to balance, and observing the breath.

3. Movement and Emotions

Through slow music and rhythmic variations, children explore movements that represent different emotions: calmness, energy, fear, joy, and tension. This is followed by a brief verbal or visual reflection.

4. Creative Workshop

Students create a “calm body map” using colors, collage, or natural materials. Each child represents the parts of the body where they perceive relaxation or tension.

5. Daily Mindful Routine

The class collaboratively builds a short 5-minute routine to be used during the school week: light stretching, breathing exercises, and a final moment of silence.

Methodologies: Learning by doing, cooperative learning, workshop-based teaching, socio-emotional education, multisensory approach.

Assessment: Systematic observation, participation in activities, and the ability to verbalize emotions and bodily perceptions.

Practical Tips for Families

Even at home, it is possible to introduce small moments of mindful movement without the need for any special tools. Just a few minutes a day are enough to help children develop greater bodily and emotional awareness.

A very useful practice is to introduce “slow pauses” during the day: breathing deeply together, practicing short box breathing exercises, stretching like animals, walking slowly in silence, or listening to environmental sounds while moving the body. It can be especially helpful to turn movement into a narrative and imaginative experience, particularly with younger children. Moving like ocean waves, wind-blown trees, or forest animals allows children to engage in the practice naturally and without performance pressure.

It is also important for adults to actively participate. Children learn primarily through relationship and imitation: sharing mindful movement moments strengthens their sense of safety and connection.

Reducing digital overstimulation, encouraging free outdoor play, and creating moments of bodily calm can significantly contribute to family emotional well-being.

Conclusion

Mindful movement for children represents much more than a simple physical activity: it is a different way of conceiving education, growth, and learning. In a historical period characterized by constant acceleration and fragmented attention, bringing the body back to the center of the educational experience means giving children a space for listening and presence.

Moving consciously not only helps improve concentration and self-regulation, but also supports the development of a more balanced relationship with emotions, with others, and with one’s inner world. Schools and families can become places where the body is not merely controlled or disciplined, but recognized as a fundamental tool for knowledge.

Educating through mindful movement ultimately means educating attention—toward oneself and toward the world.

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Bibliografia
  • Siegel, D. J. (2012). La mente relazionale. Raffaello Cortina.
  • Shonkoff, J. P., Phillips, D. A. (2000). From Neurons to Neighborhoods. National Academy Press.
  • Immordino-Yang, M. H. (2016). Emotions, Learning, and the Brain. W.W. Norton.
  • Montessori, M. (2000). La scoperta del bambino. Garzanti.
  • Ratey, J. J. (2008). Spark: The Revolutionary New Science of Exercise and the Brain. Little, Brown and Company.
  • Kabat-Zinn, J. (2015). Mindfulness per principianti. Tea.
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