Creative Insights

  1. Read more: Parents Then, Parents Now
    Parents Then, Parents Now

    Parents Then, Parents Now

    This article explores how the adult role in play has evolved—from supervising to accompanying. Through shared play, families strengthen bonds, support emotional development and expand creativity. It includes three simple games designed to foster connection, communication and creative growth through presence and shared enjoyment.

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  2. Read more: When conflict shows up, play can turn the volume down
    When conflict shows up, play can turn the volume down

    When conflict shows up, play can turn the volume down

    When conflict arises at home, creative play can shift everything. This article explores how creativity, listening and play help families de-escalate tension, externalize problems and restore connection. Through three simple games, we show how to move from “you versus me” to “us facing the problem together”.

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  3. Read more: When We Ask Kids to Drop the Phone… Are We There?
    When We Ask Kids to Drop the Phone… Are We There?

    When We Ask Kids to Drop the Phone… Are We There?

    When we ask children to leave their phones, the real question is whether we’re truly present. This article reflects on adult example, coherence and presence, and how connection matters more than rules. Through simple creative games, families can reconnect, listen, and play together—nurturing creativity, emotional awareness and meaningful bonds beyond the screen.

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  4. Read more: The Supreme Importance of Play
    The Supreme Importance of Play

    The Supreme Importance of Play

    Play is essential for children’s emotional, social and creative development. Through play, children express emotions, build relationships, manage frustration and strengthen self-esteem. Playing as a family creates meaningful bonds and shared memories. Far from being a waste of time, play is an investment in wellbeing, creativity and lifelong connection.

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  5. Read more: 3 Ways to Make Students More Original
    3 Ways to Make Students More Original

    3 Ways to Make Students More Original

    Originality grows when education is treated as a playground, not a results factory. Rewarding risk over precision builds courage. Daily micro-exercises of remote connection train associative thinking without adding workload. The two-version system separates emotional creation from rational refinement, protecting fragile ideas. These three tools help students become more original while keeping learning playful, exploratory, and deeply human.

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  6. Read more: Merry Creatmass!
    Merry Creatmass!

    Merry Creatmass!

    The holidays offer a unique opportunity to create as a family. Through sensory crafts, participatory decoration and shared experiences, children develop creativity, language, belonging and confidence. Creating together isn’t about perfect results, but about living connections. Shared creativity teaches children how to imagine, relate and build meaning from an early age.

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