Unlimited Information Is Not the Same as Knowledge
Our kids are exposed to unlimited access to information. This could either be a gift or a curse.
Research and New Insights breaks down studies, expert perspectives, and evidence around child development and learning through play. The goal is to translate research into practical insights parents can actually use when choosing toys, games, and activities.
Our kids are exposed to unlimited access to information. This could either be a gift or a curse.
Something fundamental changed after 2010: kids got more school, more screens, and somehow less ability to focus, persist, and think deeply.
Adults label kids as the art one, the math one, the sports one, and creativity quietly gets filed as “not yours.”
Their edge comes from structure at home, not magic, and it can be trained the same way.
The world of work is changing faster than schooling, and technology is changing faster than both.
Your child starts a puzzle or homework with energy, and then the first bit of friction changes everything.
If your child can do the math but collapses when it shows up inside a paragraph, you are not imagining it.
Every New Year we get excited and start adding routines to support our kids’ learning, but it rarely sticks.