Experience is what happens to you when you do things and learn from them.
Imagine you're playing with building blocks. When you stack them up high and they fall down, that's experience, it teaches you how to make taller towers without them crashing.
What Experience Feels Like
When you try something new, like riding a bike for the first time, your legs feel wobbly and shaky. That’s experience working on you. Every time you almost fall, you learn a little more about balance. Soon, you’re zooming around like a superhero, that's experience helping you grow stronger.
Why Experience Matters
Think of experience as the teacher in your brain. When you eat something spicy and it burns your tongue, your brain says, "Hey, I remember that!" Next time you see that same food, you might think twice before taking another bite. That’s experience saying, “I’ve been here before!”
So every time you try something new, you're making a friend for your brain, and that friend is called experience!
Examples
- Learning to ride a bike by falling down several times.
- Remembering your first day at school as an adult.
- Feeling proud after finishing a big project.
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See also
- What is academics?
- How Does Learning should be fun | April McKnight | TEDxLangleyED Work?
- How Does Learning from mistakes Work?
- How Does Growth Mindset vs. Fixed Mindset Work?
- How Does The Neuroscience of Learning Work?