Posture is more than physical. It’s emotional, neurological, and deeply psychological. The way a person stands or breathes often reflects internal stress, trauma, or learned compensation patterns. Yet this connection is rarely addressed in higher education.
Kor.Haus integrates posture, breath, and muscle activation into a complete mental and physical reset. By teaching students how the nervous system and psychological state affect alignment and breath, Kor.Haus opens a new conversation about the role of mental health in physical training—and provides actionable tools for clinical and performance settings.
From Pediatrics to Geriatrics: A Lifespan Approach to Human Movement
Theme: Movement re-education across the age spectrum
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Most university programs silo populations: pediatrics, adults, geriatrics. But the truth is, poor body mechanics and breath dysfunction start young—and evolve if never corrected. The Kor.Haus curriculum addresses the entire movement lifespan, from elementary school to elder care.
With a K–12 curriculum, a children’s book, and professional CEU courses, Kor.Haus gives universities a unique opportunity to prepare students with a true lifespan model. Whether they become pediatric OTs, geriatric PTs, or orthopedic specialists, they’ll be fluent in foundational principles that apply to every stage of life.
Functional Anatomy in Action: Teaching Through the Kor.Haus Lens
Theme: Clinical anatomy as a movement tool
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Most students study anatomy in the abstract—memorizing muscles, bones, and origins. But when it comes time to apply that knowledge in a movement context, the connection often breaks down.
Kor.Haus teaches applied functional anatomy. Students don’t just memorize the glute medius—they learn when it should activate in a breath-driven lunge, how it relates to pelvic floor tension, and how to cue it through posture. Anatomy becomes a living tool, not a static diagram.
University programs that use Kor.Haus can bridge the gap between memorization and movement fluency, empowering students to think, see, and cue more effectively.