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Helping Children Create The Places Where Stories Come To Life

Imaginative Worlds

Every story needs a setting. Some children create family homes filled with daily routines and relationships. Others build adventurous hideaways, secret spaces and imaginative worlds where stories unfold. Imaginative worlds provide the settings that help children organise ideas, develop characters and build stories that can continue and grow over time.

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Some children focus on creating homes and communities, while others are more interested in designing spaces, organising environments or building adventure-filled worlds.

Understanding how your child approaches storytelling can help you identify the type of imaginative world they are most likely to return to again and again.

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Many Children Build The World Before They Build The Story

While some children begin with characters, others start by creating the environment where stories will take place. They carefully arrange rooms, organise spaces and build miniature worlds that feel real and meaningful. These settings become the foundation for storytelling, allowing children to create routines, adventures and relationships that unfold within a world of their own making.

Whether creating a family home, arranging furniture or designing an adventurous treehouse retreat, children are often building much more than a play scene. They are creating a place where imagination can grow.

World Building Story Settings Miniature Environments Imaginative Play
Every World Needs Someone To Live In It

Characters Often Become The Heart Of The Story


Once children create a setting, they often begin focusing on the people, animals and creatures who live within it. Characters bring relationships, adventures and personality to the world they have built.

Stories Often Begin With A Place To Belong

Not every child starts storytelling in the same way. Some begin with characters, while others focus on creating the environment where those characters will live, explore and grow. These worlds provide structure for imagination and give children a place to organise ideas, relationships and adventures.

Whether your child is creating a family home, designing rooms or building a secret treehouse retreat, imaginative worlds provide the setting that allows stories to unfold naturally. The details may change from day to day, but the worlds children create often become the foundation for some of their richest and most meaningful storytelling experiences.