Department of Childish Revolution

A creative lab where kids ages 8-14 make things, mess up, and figure it out.

Launching 2027 with youth filmmaking workshops. More mediums to follow.

Long Beach, CA Ages 8-14 Launching 2027

The Framework

The Department of Childish Revolution (DoCR) is built on a simple premise: kids have capacities adults have forgotten, and adults have capacities kids haven't developed yet. Neither is better. Both are necessary. The work happens when they meet.

Childish

Creative courage. Immediacy. Emotional honesty. Earnest curiosity. Play as practice.

We reclaim "childish" — not as a dismissal, but as the capacity kids have before they learn to suppress it. This is virtuous. This is what gets the work made.

Adultish

Endurance. Resource knowledge. Emotional steadiness. Institutional literacy.

Adults don't direct. We remove friction. We hold space. We know where the batteries are and when someone needs a minute. Capacity, not authority.

Self-Organization is the Mechanism

Kids figure out who to work with, what to make, how to divide labor, when to regroup or split up. We don't assign groups, roles, or timelines.

Adults provide constraint, then get out of the way. Resource scarcity becomes curriculum. Conflict becomes pedagogy. The work talks back. Consequence is the teacher, not the adult.

The Lord of the Flies Reframe

Think of DoCR as a bizarro alterna-version of Lord of the Flies where the kids have not yet been taught how groups are "supposed" to organize.

We work inside the developmental window before institutional models (hierarchy, competition, dominance) fully calcify. What happens when you give kids creative tools, constraints, and trust but no blueprint for how power should work?

That's the experiment.

Who This Is For

DoCR is looking for collaborators — facilitators, educators, artists, and organizers who want to build this with us.

What to Expect

Kids self-organize into crews and figure out their own problems

Adults remove friction, not direct traffic

Resource constraint is curriculum — we don't solve scarcity for them

Consequence is the teacher — the work talks back, not the adult

Not everyone participates the same way, and that's fine

Conflict is part of the process, not a problem to eliminate

This is not: A class where kids follow instructions. A program where adults teach "the right way." A place where everyone has to get along perfectly or produce portfolio-ready work. A daycare with cameras.

If you need measurable outcomes or control over the process: This isn't the right fit, and that's okay.

Ask Yourself:

  • Can you watch a kid struggle with something and not fix it for them?
  • Are you okay not being the expert in the room?
  • Can you hold space for conflict without rushing to resolution?
  • Do you trust that kids can figure things out if you get out of the way?
  • Are you interested in what happens when kids have real agency — even if it's messy?

If you answered yes: You might be the right kind of collaborator.

If you need to be the authority or control outcomes: This isn't for you.

We're Looking For:

Facilitators

Adults who can hold the container without directing the content

Creative Practitioners

Filmmakers, artists, writers who work in process-driven practice

Educators (The Unconventional Kind)

Teachers who question pedagogy, not enforce it

Community Organizers

People who build structures for self-organization

Want to Build This With Us?

We're looking for facilitators, collaborators, and partners who share this vision.

What to Expect

  • Updates on DoCR program development and launch timeline
  • Opportunities to collaborate as a facilitator or partner organization
  • Access to the Facilitator Handbook and curriculum framework
  • Invitations to community gatherings and planning sessions