Why use LEGO®? It's fun! It's tactile, it stimulates creativity, it allows visualisation of designs, it's flexible, it appeals to all (specifically boys, who are statistically underachieving) and can be re-used again and again and again and again....
Just mentioning a link between LEGO® and Geography lessons is often enough to get teachers thinking creatively, but here are some examples of just some of the ways you can use these little bricks in your lessons.
1. Make a flag
Useful aid to get students using an atlas or the internet in a research-based capacity. Perhaps get students to make the flag from LEGO®, write down some key facts about the country (or mini-paragraph linking your topic to the relevant country) and photograph their writing next to their flag.
2. Grouping / categorising
Get some chunky bricks, some stickers (address labels cut to size may be useful here) and go for it! Maybe you will do locational Geography such as matching countries to their capitals. You could use it for fun case study revision with KS4 - 5 by getting them to match case study title with other essential information such as year, cause, effect, location....
You can get students to photograph their correct answers to help with their revision.
3. Create a landscape
LEGO® bricks can be moved. Landscapes move. This may take a bit more time to set up but could be a valuable way of getting students to demonstrate their understanding.
An example could be showing the formation of a gorge caused by waterfall erosion. You can get students to create it, photograph each stage, print it as a storyboard and explain each step.
Otherwise there is soil, rock, water tables, volcanoes, earthquake simulation...
4. Designing
Perhaps an eco-friendly house, flood defences along a river or coast, an ecolodge, a small yet efficient house within a favela....
5. And more!
I'm currently planning how to paint a world map on to a large LEGO® board so I can use it flexibly within lessons. Imagine giving everyone a brick and asking them to place it on the country that is the furthest place they've ever travelled. The taller the country's tower, the more students have been to that place. Imagine the conversations that could stimulate. Imagine the other ideas that are possible here.
I'd love to hear from you if you have used LEGO® in your lessons. What did you do? How did the students react? What were the pros and cons? Would you do it again?
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