High Volume

#Braindevelopment

شاهد 1.7M فيديو ريلز عن Braindevelopment من أشخاص حول العالم.

شاهد بشكل مجهول دون تسجيل الدخول.

1.7M posts
NewTrendingViral

ريلز رائجة

(12)
#Braindevelopment Reel by @losrobleschildrenschoir (verified account) - We've been taught to think of music as "just entertainment."

But when a child studies music, something much deeper is happening.

Music strengthens t
19.3M
LO
@losrobleschildrenschoir
We’ve been taught to think of music as “just entertainment.” But when a child studies music, something much deeper is happening. Music strengthens the parts of the brain responsible for: - language - memory - attention - emotional expression And the longer a child stays in music, the bigger the impact: - 1 year = 11% increased academic performance - 4 years = +23% That’s not fluff. That’s BRAIN DEVELOPMENT. Music doesn’t change your child’s brain overnight. It grows it, layer by layer, year by year. If your child is drawn to music, listen to that signal. Their brain already knows what it needs. Follow @losrobleschildrenschoir for music, brain, and learning facts! #musiceducation #childrenschoir #learnthroughplay #childdevelopment #intentionalparenting
#Braindevelopment Reel by @steammadesimple (verified account) - Kids are naturally curious.
Especially the youngest kids.

They touch things. They test things. They ask why.
They experiment without fear.
They are n
482.9K
ST
@steammadesimple
Kids are naturally curious. Especially the youngest kids. They touch things. They test things. They ask why. They experiment without fear. They are not worried about getting it wrong yet. Do you know what I mean? And as parents, I really believe it is our job to protect that. I care so deeply about this because in my years of teaching, I watched something happen over and over again. By six or seven years old, kids had already decided who they were as learners. “I’m bad at math.” “I’m not a science kid.” Six years old. That is terrifying. And research backs this up. Kids start forming beliefs about their abilities in the early elementary years, and once those beliefs set in, they affect confidence and willingness to try long term. And every experience is different, right? Some kids learn this at school. Some learn it at home. But here is what matters. Up to 90 percent of brain development happens before age five. This is when confidence is built. This is when curiosity is either protected or slowly corrected. At this age, their motivation is still there. Their willingness to fail and try again is still there. But something happens. And it happens quickly. That is why I focus so heavily on toddlers and preschoolers. Especially high-energy, sensory-seeking kids who need to move, touch, and explore in order to learn. There is nothing wrong with that wiring. We just have to work with it instead of against it. That is exactly how I design every activity inside my Toddler Activity Guide. If protecting curiosity and building confident learners matters to you, comment ACTIVITY and I will send it to you 🤍
#Braindevelopment Reel by @margotcoach_ (verified account) - 1. Travel directly stimulates brain development.
New places aren't just "entertainment."
They create a stream of non-standard tasks: orientation, adap
832.0K
MA
@margotcoach_
1. Travel directly stimulates brain development. New places aren’t just “entertainment.” They create a stream of non-standard tasks: orientation, adaptation, new rules, languages, rhythms. A child’s brain learns not through instructions, but through lived experience. This builds flexible neural connections that later support faster thinking and better navigation in life. 2. Travel builds core confidence. A child sees parents not in “routine mode,” but as real, adaptive humans — sometimes tired, sometimes uncertain, yet capable. This is absorbed deeper than words. An inner belief forms: if adults can handle the unknown, I can too. 3. Travel strengthens relationships. Getting lost, getting wet, finding a café, laughing at small mishaps — these micro-adventures become shared memory. Not lessons or discipline, but lived experience. This shared experience often becomes what holds connection later, especially during adolescence, when words stop working. 4. Travel expands a child’s sense of what’s possible. A child begins to feel that the world is bigger than one script. There are other cities, cultures, ways of living. Which means — there is choice. This reduces fear of the future and gives inner permission to live not “like everyone else,” but in a way that feels aligned. 5. Maturity forms naturally, without pressure. On the road, a child practices independence organically: making small decisions, taking responsibility, negotiating, staying flexible. Not through lectures — but through reality. This is how growth happens without breaking or forcing. “To travel is to live,” wrote Hans Christian Andersen. And if we look deeper — many adults later call these memories their “mother’s” or “father’s” inner support. ✍️ Comment “GUIDE” and I’ll share a practical guide that will help you rebuild self-trust and calm the nervous system when stress and symptoms feel stuck. 👉Follow @margotcoach_
#Braindevelopment Reel by @ladbible (verified account) - He had to stop and drop some game 🤣⁠
⁠
Experts say children stare because they're constantly learning and processing the world around them. Staring h
20.4M
LA
@ladbible
He had to stop and drop some game 🤣⁠ ⁠ Experts say children stare because they’re constantly learning and processing the world around them. Staring helps them focus, observe details, and make sense of new faces, objects, and situations. For toddlers and young children, it’s a key part of brain development, like visual curiosity in action.⁠ ⁠ They’re not being rude or awkward, they’re just taking it all in. Whether it’s someone with a different appearance, an interesting toy, or something unexpected, staring is often their way of quietly asking questions before they have the words to say them out loud.⁠ ⁠ 🎥: ViralHog⁠ ⁠ #parenting #ladbible #comedy
#Braindevelopment Reel by @dr.leahrap (verified account) - 1.	Your child will not starve because they skipped a meal.
Healthy kids regulate intake over days, not single dinners. Stop panic feeding.
	2.	Short o
2.6M
DR
@dr.leahrap
1. Your child will not starve because they skipped a meal. Healthy kids regulate intake over days, not single dinners. Stop panic feeding. 2. Short order cooking is teaching them who runs the kitchen. If you become a line cook, you’re reinforcing picky eating, not preventing it. 3. Milk, snacks, and constant grazing are killing appetite. If your kid “never eats,” but drinks milk all day or snacks hourly, that’s the answer. 4. Carbs and fat matter just as much as protein for kids. Kids need energy for growth and brain development. Fear of carbs is adult diet culture leaking into childhood. 5. Exposure matters. Pressure backfires. Offer the food. Eat it yourself. Say nothing. Repeat 10 to 20 times. 6. You don’t need a perfect plate. One safe food plus what the family is eating is enough. Every single time. 7. Dessert isn’t earned with bites. That turns vegetables into punishment and sweets into trophies. 8. Kids are allowed to dislike food. They are not allowed to control the menu. 9. Your anxiety is louder than your words. If meals feel tense, rushed, or emotionally charged, kids will eat less. 10. Feeding your child is your job. Eating it is theirs. Stop crossing roles. And for perspective I know an orthopedic surgeon I went to medical school with who lived on rice and chicken fingers. He graduated. He’s a successful adult. His first salad was at 25. Kids don’t need perfect nutrition. They need consistency, exposure, and parents who can zoom out. You’re not failing. But some of these habits are making feeding way harder than it needs to be.
#Braindevelopment Reel by @parenting.whispers - A girl doesn't understand love, safety, or self-worth through words.
She learns it through her father's presence, reactions, and everyday behavior.

H
1.3M
PA
@parenting.whispers
A girl doesn’t understand love, safety, or self-worth through words. She learns it through her father’s presence, reactions, and everyday behavior. Here’s how a girl’s brain sees her dad at different stages 👇 Ages 0–2 She isn’t listening to instructions yet. She’s feeling: • Is dad calm or tense? • Do I feel safe in his arms? • Can I relax my body around him? When dad feels steady, her brain learns: 🧠 “The world is safe. I am safe.” ⸻ Ages 3–5 Now she starts watching closely. She notices: • How dad talks when he’s upset • How he treats her mom and others • How he reacts to mistakes She learns behavior by watching — not lectures. 🧠 “This is how I should speak. This is how I should act.” ⸻ Ages 6–9 Her inner voice begins forming. She silently asks: • Do you believe I can try? • Will you guide me or take over? When dad guides instead of controls, she learns: 🧠 “I can figure things out. I don’t give up easily.” ⸻ Ages 10–13 Respect becomes everything. She starts caring deeply about: • Being heard • Being trusted • Being valued If dad controls or embarrasses, she pulls away. If dad listens and allows independence, she stays connected. 🧠 “I can grow and still belong.” ⸻ Ages 14–18 Now she’s asking the biggest question: “What kind of woman will I become?” Dad becomes a quiet example. She watches: • How he handles stress • How he treats women • How he admits mistakes 🧠 “This is what respect looks like. This is what love feels like.” ⸻ Girls don’t remember long talks ❌ They remember how their father made them feel every single day ✅ A father doesn’t just raise a daughter. He helps shape her confidence, boundaries, and self-worth for life. 👉 Share it with a father who needs this reminder. 👉 Comment “GUIDE” if you want more gentle, brain-based parenting insights. [brain development, child development, activities for kids, parenting, dad life, outdoor activities, brain boosting activities]
#Braindevelopment Reel by @simrun.chopra (verified account) - Emerging research suggests that excessive screen exposure in children is associated with measurable changes in brain structure - particularly in areas
555.5K
SI
@simrun.chopra
Emerging research suggests that excessive screen exposure in children is associated with measurable changes in brain structure — particularly in areas related to language, executive function, and impulse control. But context matters. It’s not “all screens are evil.” The impact depends on: 📱 Duration (hours per day) 📱 Age of the child 📱 Type of content (passive scrolling vs educational interaction) 📱 Whether screens replace sleep, movement, or social interaction The brain develops through stimulation — real-world play, conversation, boredom, problem-solving. When screens crowd those out, development shifts. This isn’t about guilt. It’s about balance. Prioritize: • Outdoor play • Face-to-face conversation • Consistent sleep • Device-free meals • No screens before bed Brain development compounds — just like habits. Share this with every parent you know
#Braindevelopment Reel by @_23kavi - Brain development activities 
#reelsinstagram
#explorepage
#trendingreels
#viralvideos
#instadaily
5.6M
_2
@_23kavi
Brain development activities #reelsinstagram #explorepage #trendingreels #viralvideos #instadaily
#Braindevelopment Reel by @kristinvalen (verified account) - First of all, I'm sharing this with good intentions. Not to compare or make anyone feel bad, but to inspire and show what has worked very well for us
4.1M
KR
@kristinvalen
First of all, I’m sharing this with good intentions. Not to compare or make anyone feel bad, but to inspire and show what has worked very well for us 🌟 My son is 7 years old. He is extremely bright, very healthy, and an incredibly happy child. He could read when he was only two years old, and he is most likely the youngest in the world who has built some of the largest LEGO sets in the world, including the Titanic and the Eiffel Tower. He is also remarkably healthy. He’s almost never sick and has only had a fever twice in his whole life. I have been very mindful about nutrition with both my children. My oldest son @williamaugustinofficial is now 24, and I see the same pattern with him; strong health, good energy, and overall wellbeing. Over many years I have also coached families, and I have seen similar positive results with the children of my clients. I share this because I genuinely want to contribute with knowledge that can help children thrive. We started cod liver oil when he was a baby, and I also took it during pregnancy. Research suggests that nutrients like omega-3 and vitamin D support brain development, and some studies show that children’s IQ scores even increase when mothers get enough of these nutrients during pregnancy. Our meals are quite simple and nutrient dense. Breakfast is usually eggs, sometimes steak, and berries. Lunch is often pancakes made with almond flour, eggs, and cottage cheese with berries. In the afternoon he might have homemade sourdough bread with butter and honey or bee pollen, often with some organic chicken. We also tend to eat dinner fairly late, a bit like families in southern Europe. After school there is no rush. He has a small snack, we relax, and later in the evening we have dinner, often with friends or at a restaurant. Dinners are usually built around fish or high quality meat, and the evening becomes a calm and social time together. I truly believe food, lifestyle, and ofc environment play a big role in how children feel, develop, and thrive. My hope in sharing this is simply to offer inspiration and ideas that might help other families create healthier, happier lives for their children 🤍
#Braindevelopment Reel by @conscious_parenting101 - As parents, we often try to fix attention at the surface level.
But real attention is built when the nervous system feels settled first.
That's where
1.1M
CO
@conscious_parenting101
As parents, we often try to fix attention at the surface level. But real attention is built when the nervous system feels settled first. That’s where Shizuka Practice gently supports children, from the inside out ✨ Attention doesn’t begin with sitting still. It begins when a child feels calm, safe, and regulated. "Shizuka Practice" focuses on that missing foundation! so attention can grow naturally, without force or pressure. 🤍 Share it with a parent who needs this reminder today. 🌱 Child Brain Development | Gentle Parenting Tips | Playful Learning | Positive Discipline | Early Childhood Parenting | Parenting . . . #parenting #motherhood #activities
#Braindevelopment Reel by @nicholaknox (verified account) - We started baby sign language early - not to rush speech, but to give her a way to communicate before words fully arrived.

And the difference has bee
3.8M
NI
@nicholaknox
We started baby sign language early - not to rush speech, but to give her a way to communicate before words fully arrived. And the difference has been incredible. At 13 months, she can tell me what she needs instead of crying. Milk. More. All done. Help. Eat. Please. Thank you. That means less frustration, more confidence, and a baby who feels understood. If you’re wondering how to start, it’s simpler than most people think. Pick just one or two high-frequency words like milk or more. Every time you say the word out loud, do the sign at the same time, consistently and slowly. No drills, no pressure. Just repetition during real moments (mealtimes are perfect). They’ll watch for a few days… and then one day, they sign it back 🥹 Research shows baby sign language can support: • early communication skills • stronger language development later on • improved memory and attention • problem-solving and cognitive flexibility It isn’t about making her smarter - it’s about giving her growing brain tools to express itself. When babies realize their actions have meaning, you can almost see the lightbulb go on. That cause-and-effect understanding is huge for brain development. And the bonus? More connection. More calm. More moments like this instead of tears. If you’re on the fence, consider this your sign 🤍 Communication builds confidence- even before words. Save this for later or share with a parent who’s curious about baby sign language.
#Braindevelopment Reel by @biancadeforest - Introducing eggs to your baby isn't a one-and-done thing.

Once baby has been introduced to eggs, it's actually a good idea to keep offering them regu
247.6K
BI
@biancadeforest
Introducing eggs to your baby isn’t a one-and-done thing. Once baby has been introduced to eggs, it’s actually a good idea to keep offering them regularly. Research shows that early exposure to common allergens (like eggs, peanuts, etc.) can help the immune system learn that these foods are safe. But consistency matters. Continuing to include eggs in your baby’s diet helps maintain that tolerance instead of letting the exposure fade away. Eggs are also a great first food nutritionally. They’re packed with protein, healthy fats, choline (important for brain development), and several vitamins babies need during that rapid first year of growth. So once baby tolerates eggs well, I like to keep them in the regular rotation. It’s simple, nutritious, and a great way to keep building a varied diet early on. 🥚 #eggexposure #eggallergen #babyledweaning #blw

✨ دليل اكتشاف #Braindevelopment

يستضيف انستقرام 1.7 million منشور تحت #Braindevelopment، مما يخلق واحدة من أكثر النظم البصرية حيوية على المنصة.

اكتشف أحدث محتوى #Braindevelopment بدون تسجيل الدخول. أكثر الريلز إثارة للإعجاب تحت هذا الهاشتاق، خاصة من @ladbible, @losrobleschildrenschoir and @_23kavi، تحظى باهتمام واسع. شاهدها بجودة عالية وحملها على جهازك.

ما هو الترند في #Braindevelopment؟ أكثر مقاطع فيديو Reels مشاهدة والمحتوى الفيروسي معروضة أعلاه.

الفئات الشعبية

📹 اتجاهات الفيديو: اكتشف أحدث Reels والفيديوهات الفيروسية

📈 استراتيجية الهاشتاق: استكشف خيارات الهاشتاق الرائجة لمحتواك

🌟 صناع المحتوى المميزون: @ladbible, @losrobleschildrenschoir, @_23kavi وآخرون يقودون المجتمع

الأسئلة الشائعة حول #Braindevelopment

مع Pictame، يمكنك تصفح جميع ريلز وفيديوهات #Braindevelopment دون تسجيل الدخول إلى انستقرام. نشاط المشاهدة الخاص بك يبقى خاصاً تماماً - لا آثار، لا حساب مطلوب. ببساطة ابحث عن الهاشتاق وابدأ استكشاف المحتوى الرائج فوراً.

تحليل الأداء

تحليل 12 ريلز

✅ منافسة معتدلة

💡 المنشورات الأفضل تحصل على متوسط 12.3M مشاهدة (2.5× فوق المتوسط)

انشر بانتظام 3-5 مرات/أسبوع في الأوقات النشطة

نصائح إنشاء المحتوى والاستراتيجية

🔥 #Braindevelopment يظهر إمكانات تفاعل عالية - انشر بشكل استراتيجي في أوقات الذروة

✨ العديد من المبدعين الموثقين نشطون (67%) - ادرس أسلوب محتواهم

✍️ التعليقات التفصيلية مع القصة تعمل بشكل جيد - متوسط الطول 1219 حرف

📹 مقاطع الفيديو العمودية عالية الجودة (9:16) تعمل بشكل أفضل لـ #Braindevelopment - استخدم إضاءة جيدة وصوت واضح

عمليات البحث الشائعة المتعلقة بـ #Braindevelopment

🎬لمحبي الفيديو

Braindevelopment Reelsمشاهدة فيديوهات Braindevelopment

📈للباحثين عن الاستراتيجية

Braindevelopment هاشتاقات رائجةأفضل Braindevelopment هاشتاقات

🌟استكشف المزيد

استكشف Braindevelopment