Community

The future should feel human.

Community work shows the same belief behind Lalo’s Playground: new tools should feel understandable, creative, safe, and human.

Find the signal. Build the world.

The Workshop

Creativity first. Tools second.

The students’ ideas stayed at the center. AI helped organize, visualize, and expand the story, but the imagination started with them.

01

Human ideas led the work

Students chose the product, story, details, feeling, and direction. The tool helped shape the idea without replacing the imagination.

02

AI became a creative partner

The workshop framed AI as something that needs taste, safety, intention, and a human point of view.

03

Everyone had a role

Students could contribute by writing, sharing ideas, choosing details, shaping the story, or presenting the final mini commercial.

Classroom Concepts

Small ideas became little worlds.

Each classroom project had its own signal: a product, a feeling, a problem to solve, and a playful way to make people understand it.

2nd Grade · Kelly Alford

Ape Crunch, Sour Zap, Cosmic Pop, Cozy Cup

Four student product worlds shaped through imagination, teamwork, and ad-style direction.

4th Grade · Amie Planck

Doodle Tales, Cube Bubble, Dream Drops, SunPack

Four classroom concepts turned into clearer stories, product feelings, and short visual worlds.

5th Grade · Heather Guerra

Flavor Flow, Glow Steps, StrikeSense, Switch Hoodie

Four future-facing concepts showing how students can organize ideas without losing their voice.

Workshop Videos

The classroom ideas in motion.

All sixteen recovered workshop films are back with their original thumbnails and video links.

Ape Crunch Cereal

A student product world from Kelly Alford’s 2nd grade classroom.

Workshop VideoOaktree Elementary

Sour Zap Lemonade

A student product world from Kelly Alford’s 2nd grade classroom.

Workshop VideoOaktree Elementary

Cosmic Pop

A student product world from Kelly Alford’s 2nd grade classroom.

Workshop VideoOaktree Elementary

Cozy Cup

A student product world from Kelly Alford’s 2nd grade classroom.

Workshop VideoOaktree Elementary

Doodle Tales

A student product world from Amie Planck’s 4th grade classroom.

Workshop VideoOaktree Elementary

Cube Bubble

A student product world from Amie Planck’s 4th grade classroom.

Workshop VideoOaktree Elementary

Dream Drops

A student product world from Amie Planck’s 4th grade classroom.

Workshop VideoOaktree Elementary

SunPack

A student product world from Amie Planck’s 4th grade classroom.

Workshop VideoOaktree Elementary

Flavor Flow

A student product world from Heather Guerra’s 5th grade classroom.

Workshop VideoOaktree Elementary

Glow Steps

A student product world from Heather Guerra’s 5th grade classroom.

Workshop VideoOaktree Elementary

StrikeSense

A student product world from Heather Guerra’s 5th grade classroom.

Workshop VideoOaktree Elementary

Switch Hoodie

A student product world from Heather Guerra’s 5th grade classroom.

Workshop VideoOaktree Elementary

LearnLoop

An educator-created concept from the Oaktree Elementary AI workshop experience.

Workshop VideoOaktree Elementary

Ohio Converter

An educator-created concept from the Oaktree Elementary AI workshop experience.

Workshop VideoOaktree Elementary

Magic Button

A principal-created concept from the Oaktree Elementary AI workshop experience.

Workshop VideoOaktree Elementary

PawPort

An educator-created concept from the Oaktree Elementary AI workshop experience.

Workshop VideoOaktree Elementary

The Belief

New tools should not make people feel small.

AI should not make students, educators, founders, or communities feel behind. It should make the future feel more reachable: clearer, safer, more creative, and more human.