Cheer for Matilda and Lovisa
Jumping, shouting and swinging a pompom in sync with two friends adds up to four things at once. The steps below split them up so your child can master one part at a time.
♂Jumping cheerleader with ML logo
A smiling cheerleader in a blue and yellow uniform with the letters ML on the chest jumping with two pompoms raised, framed by a circle.
About this visual support
The coordination inside a cheer routine is underrated. Feet jump, hands swing, the voice sings, and all of it has to land in the same beat as Matilda and Lovisa next to her. For a child still wiring up arms and legs to cooperate, this is not one activity, it is four running in parallel.
Visual cards let you separate the four tracks. A card for just the jump, one for just the arms with the pompom, one for the words of the chant, one for all three together. Now your child can assemble the whole instead of copying the finished move on the first try. One concrete tip: film Matilda and Lovisa rehearsing and place that clip beside the step cards, so your child sees exactly what the assembled version should look like.
In Routined you can save both the steps and your own clip, and let your child rehearse in their own order before the routine goes group-wide.