Cécile Abergel , therapist in Jerusalem, answers questions from the KING’S ART team on the benefits of play in learning.
Journalist: hello Cécile
Cecile Abergel: hello
Journalist: how did you discover the KING’S ART game?
Cécile Abergel: Anne presented the game to me and left me a prototype to get my opinion as a mom and also as a therapist.
Journalist: what is your mum’s view of the KING’S ART game?
Cécile Abergel: I can say that my children were lucky enough to be able to play there during confinement. They really liked the drawings and often wanted to play them. By the way, my 4 year old daughter knows all the letters of the alphabet thanks to this game.
Journalist: and the therapist, what does she think of the KING’S ART game?
Images are a particularly effective means of communicating with children and developing their maturity and emotional intelligence. Through a game of soft and pleasant visual representations, KING’s ART not only allows us to teach young children the alphabet, in a fun and entertaining way. But it also helps us to enter gently into the child’s world to create stronger bonds with him.
Journalist: thank you Cécile for your professional view of the KING’s ART game.