Try this the next time you have a rainy day and your child or classroom has free time. You can turn a rainy day into an amazing brainstorm!
Brainstorming is a technique for generating a free-flow of ideas to solve a problem within a short period of time. Brainstorming can be practiced by individuals or by a guided group of two or more.
Groups need a facilitator, whose role is to encourage participation, to embrace and record each idea, and to remind participants to defer judgment, however wild an idea may seem.
Although brainstorming in a group may not always produce the best ideas, the sessions offer other valuable benefits. They boost confidence, warm up creative muscles, improve classroom spirit, and create a trusting social climate. Creative thought flourishes in positive psychological environments.
Start by first posing a problem to solve, such as imaginative ways to decorate a cake or inventing a new game to play with a ball. Have the participants offer problem suggestions as well. If you have some ideas for kid-friendly problems to solve, share them in the comments below.
As the facilitator, ask your children to name any idea that pops into their heads. In a group, kids may use others’ ideas to spark more ideas. Here are some brainstorming guidelines:
Brainstorming: Taking Ideas by Storm
Break Any Rules Except These
Download our Free mini-poster, “Classroom Rules for Brainstorming,” on our Freebies page.