Early Enrichment Program – The Golden Stage (12–24 months) – Ivy School

About Ivy School

Ivy School is a bilingual kindergarten system for children aged 12 months to 6 years old, with 8 campuses located in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City. It is a child’s first bilingual school – a place where they are nurtured with love and encouraged to grow in a rich, inspiring, and active English–Vietnamese learning environment.

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  • Early Enrichment Program – The Golden Stage (12–24 months)

Early Enrichment Program – The Golden Stage (12–24 months)

We consider ages 12 to 24 months a truly golden window in a child’s development journey — when the brain, emotions, and language are growing and connecting at their most powerful pace.

3.1. Multi-Sensory Activation – Full-Body Learning Experiences

Activities are thoughtfully designed to stimulate all six senses: sight, hearing, touch, smell, taste, and movement.

Children interact with a variety of sensory materials — sounds, lights, shapes, textures, and scents — enhancing their ability to differentiate, perceive, and self-regulate through real-world experiences.

Each day in class is a journey of discovering the world through their own bodies.

Language development is nurtured through meaningful 1:1 conversations between teachers and children during songs, stories, poems, and emotional expression.

Vocabulary is repeated in real-life contexts, expanding word knowledge and comprehension.

Both verbal and body language are encouraged — building a natural foundation for speech and clear self-expression.

Children are gently introduced to English through songs, simple repetitive phrases, images, and games. This builds early auditory recognition and a positive emotional connection with the second language — following a natural “absorption through listening” process.

Gross motor activities (crawling, walking, running, climbing, sliding) develop physical strength, balance, and body awareness.

Fine motor activities (grasping, flipping, stacking, threading) enhance hand-eye coordination and control of small movements.

All movement experiences are scientifically sequenced and interconnected, giving the brain a daily “workout” and forming millions of new neural connections.

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