Extracurricular Activities
Soccer
A lesson in teamwork, discipline, and perseverance. Children will develop physical skills such as speed and endurance, while learning the importance of collaborating and respecting their teammates.
Karate
This Japanese martial art teaches much more than combat techniques. Judo promotes respect, self-confidence, and self-control, helping children develop physically and mentally.
Basketball
Basketball is ideal for improving agility, teamwork, and physical stamina. Students learn to make quick decisions and collaborate effectively with their teammates.
Volleyball
Participants will learn different techniques specific to this sport through each training session, games, and matches. It’s a perfect activity to discover the value of teamwork.
Dance
Dance fosters discipline, elegance, and body expression. Young dancers will learn basic movements, posture, and balance, strengthening both their bodies and their confidence and creativity.
Zumba
In Zumba, the arms and legs generally move in different directions, so it requires a lot of coordination. Additionally, in young people, it reduces fatigue, improves alertness and concentration, and enhances overall cognitive function.
Cross Country
This sport is ideal for developing strength. Regular practice on surfaces like the one we have at school helps strengthen the endurance and strength of the calves, quadriceps, and hamstrings, as well as improve balance and proprioception (the sense of your body’s position and movement).
Tennis
With this sport, students will improve their balance, mobility, agility, strength, and physical fitness. Mentally, tennis develops concentration, reactive behavior, and problem-solving skills.
Screen Printing
Screen printing aims to foster creativity, personal expression, and cultural awareness through the artisanal printing technique. In this space, students can explore graphic design, screen preparation, and printing on paper and textiles.
Tiny Tots
Focused on preschool students, this activity brings together a series of stimuli to develop executive and motor skills, complementing their learning.
Minecraft
Designed for students to develop cognitive, social, and technological skills through the educational use of the Minecraft Education video game. Through guided projects, students will learn to build, plan, work as a team, and solve problems creatively.
Theater
Developing expressiveness: Theater helps children express their emotions and feelings in a safe and controlled way. Learning to play different characters allows them to explore various facets of their own personality and improves their ability to communicate with others.
Oil Painting – Sculpture
Art is a window to the imagination. Through painting and sculpture, students explore their creativity and develop fine motor skills, as well as learn to express their emotions visually.
Little Chef
Learning to cook from a young age allows children to become familiar with different foods, learn about their properties, and discover new ways to prepare them. This can foster a taste for a varied and healthy diet, laying the foundation for a healthy life.
Violin
A fascinating challenge, but if you’re looking for the simplest and most powerful reason, it boils down to this: it’s the closest thing to having a human “voice” in your hands. It allows you to develop a unique emotional connection, provides fantastic brain training, and is an extremely versatile instrument.
Slime Factory
Slime stimulates children’s imagination and creativity, allowing for free expression and enhancing motor skills through different hand and finger movements to move the slime, knead it, and form fun figures.
Percussion
Learning percussion connects with the most primal instinct in music: rhythm. It trains the brain for motor independence. The right hand, left hand, and feet are taught to work autonomously yet in coordination. It’s a fun physical puzzle.
Garden
A practical and fun course where students learn to sow, care for, and harvest plants, developing values, environmental responsibility, and a love for nature. Learning with your hands on the ground has never been so meaningful!
Piano
Learning to play the piano requires hand-eye coordination, reading sheet music, and understanding musical concepts. Therefore, in this activity, we will teach you how to become familiar with this instrument.