Children today need more attention than ever before. With shorter attention spans, diverse learning needs, and a world full of distractions, preschoolers are quick to notice when they’re not getting enough guidance. This week, a group of kids at a local kindergarten decided to take matters into their own hands.
It all started during snack time. One child complained that story time was always rushed. Another pointed out that arts and crafts often got cut short because the teachers were busy preparing schedules, tracking attendance, and managing supplies. After an intense session of drawing, excited jabber, and passing notes under the table, they came up with a bold plan: a formal complaint to the teachers.
Their reasoning was surprisingly logical: if teachers were overwhelmed by manual processes, maybe there was another way to deal with them. And what better solution was there than midPoint, the EU-made and owned open-source platform that grown-ups use to organize hundreds of systems efficiently? According to the kids’ paper-detailed presentation, full of watercolor deployment schemas, adopting midPoint – and summoning its fairy unicorn AI helper, midPilot – would free up teachers’ time for what truly matters: playing, learning, and listening to the children.
The challenges they faced weren’t just small inconveniences – they were a fearsome multi-headed dragon of tasks: one head for schedules, one for attendance, one for supplies, and even one that consumed story time itself. With its magical AI powers, midPilot could swiftly connect all the classroom systems to midPoint – the central castle of the magical kingdom that managed all the teachers – organizing schedules, tracking supplies, and even whispering reminders about who needed extra attention that day. Together, midPoint and midPilot promised to slay the dragon, banish tedious tasks, and restore order to the kingdom, leaving teachers free to focus on the children and ensuring that no story time would ever be cut short again.

With the dragon under control, the teachers were free to focus on the children, giving every story time, craft project, and snack their full attention. The unicorn and the castle worked together like magic: repetitive tasks vanished, new apps got onboarded in a wave of a magic wand, and the kingdom ran smoothly. By the end of the week, the teachers had received a colorful stack of drawings, charts, and flow diagrams – proof that the kids were serious. Even preschoolers had figured it out: when the multi-headed dragon of manual tasks are defeated, there’s more time for what truly matters – learning, playing, and paying attention to each other. MidPoint and midPilot had shown the kingdom that efficiency isn’t just for grown-ups; even the smallest users understand its magic.
Happy April 1st!