I strongly believe in the importance of supporting your child's development at home by providing non-screen time activities that build essential skills. The games and activities I create are designed to help parents do exactly this—offer engaging alternatives to screens that simultaneously develop capabilities that will help children succeed in school and life.
From pattern recognition and memory skills to strategic thinking and emotional regulation, simple games and activities serve as powerful tools for building your child's cognitive and social-emotional toolkit. The best part is that these don't require special training or expensive materials—just your attention and involvement.
As an educator who has worked with children across several decades, I've observed concerning trends that correlate with increased screen time. Children's ability to focus, stay on task, and follow instructions has noticeably diminished. Many struggle to maintain attention during activities that don't provide the constant stimulation and immediate feedback that screens do.
This isn't surprising when we consider how digital media is designed. Many apps and programs are specifically engineered to capture and hold attention through frequent rewards and stimulation—creating habits that make sustained concentration on less stimulating tasks increasingly difficult.
I've seen this manifest in classrooms and learning environments as children who struggle to listen to multi-step directions, who become frustrated when activities require persistence, or who have difficulty engaging with materials that don't flash, beep, or provide instant gratification.
Rather than simply lamenting these challenges, I focus on solutions. Providing your child with non-screen time activities helps reverse these trends by retraining the brain's ability to sustain attention and follow through on tasks.
The games and activities I create are specifically designed to build these crucial skills:
Following sequential instructions
Maintaining focus on a single task
Delaying gratification while working toward a goal
Engaging in creative problem-solving
Developing persistence through enjoyable challenges
These aren't just academic skills—they're life skills that translate to success in school, relationships, and eventually, careers. By incorporating simple games and activities into family life, parents can help their children develop the mental muscles needed to thrive in a world that increasingly demands self-regulation and focused attention.