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The Reggio Emilia Method: When Creative Intelligence Shapes Complex Learning in Higher Education
For me, experiencing the Reggio Emilia institutions in Italy was extraordinary, and it left a deep mark on my educational philosophy moving forward. It revealed that education is not only about transferring knowledge; it is about shaping belonging, identity, and connection. These schools embodied the idea that creativity is not a luxury. It is how communities rebuild. It is how learners find their voice, and how societies imagine and build their future.

Louise Sommer
4 min read


The New Addiction? What AI Can Teach Us from Social Media’s Mistakes
Is AI creating a new kind of addiction? AI risks repeating social media’s mistakes by creating artificial connection instead of authentic relationships. This article explores how design choices shape addiction, why empathy and presence matter in education and leadership, and how universities and organisations can foster digital resilience, critical reflection, and human-centred learning in an AI-driven future.

Louise Sommer
4 min read


The Crisis Isn’t Artificial Intelligence. The Crisis Is Artificial Connection in the Classroom
AI shows us what we’ve neglected: closeness, listening, and humanity itself. Let’s stop making AI the scapegoat for what is missing in us. We are not losing ourselves to artificial intelligence, but we are losing ourselves to artificial connection and most people don’t even notice it happening. We scroll, we click, we respond, we 'connect', yet we feel increasingly alone, unseen, and disconnected. This is not a technological crisis. This is a human crisis of connection and le

Louise Sommer
3 min read


Beyond Efficiency: Why Higher Education Cannot Outsource Thinking to AI
This article explores the risks of outsourcing thinking to AI in higher education. Drawing on cognitive science and educational psychology, it explains how deep learning depends on effort, reflection, and relational engagement. It highlights the role of university lecturers in protecting cognitive development, academic integrity, and independent thinking in an AI-driven learning environment where efficiency increasingly replaces understanding.

Louise Sommer
4 min read


How ancient Malta engineered the mind for higher learning and creativity
Ancient Malta’s Hypogeum reveals how Neolithic societies engineered the brain for learning, empathy, and long-term thinking. Combining archaeology, neuroscience, and cultural history, Louise Sommer explores how past reward systems shaped human potential — and what we can learn to design better education, leadership, and social systems today. A thought-provoking read for researchers, educators, and innovators.

Louise Sommer
6 min read
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