WIFI (onsite at St. Martin’s): NAREA Guest
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Creativity as a Collaborative Right: Learning in Relationship and Context
March 5–7, 2026 | New Orleans, Louisiana
Thursday, March 5
St. Martin’s Episcopal School
1:00
Check In
2:00
Welcome
Creativity as a Constituent Element of Human Beings
Mid-Afternoon Stretch
Creativity? A Muscle That Needs to Be Exercised Every Day
5:30
School Tour
St. Martin’s Episcopal School & George Cottage
7:00
End of Day
Friday, March 6
St. Martin’s Episcopal School
8:00
Morning Coffee
9:00
Welcome
Children that Count!
Mid-Morning Stretch
Your Name Is Something You Have Inside You
1:00
Announcements and Lunch
2:00
Participant Reflections
Camilla and the Double Bass
Mid-Afternoon Stretch
Piazza/Piazze: Places of Encounter with Differences
5:00
End of Day
5:30–7:30
LCM Open House with Cultural & Culinary Offerings (Optional)
Saturday, March 7
St. Martin’s Episcopal School
8:00
Morning Coffee
9:00
Welcome
“When You Grow Up, You Think About Your Dream”
Mid-Morning Stretch
The Pleasure of Discovery (Nido Rivieri)
12:30
Announcements and Lunch
1:00
School Tours
Green Trees at Isidore Newman School, Little Gate at Louise S. McGehee School, Early Partners, & Louisiana Children’s Museum
4:00
End of Day
Welcome!
The board and staff of the North American Reggio Emilia Alliance (NAREA) warmly welcome you to New Orleans and to our 17th NAREA Winter Conference, Creativity as a Collective Right: Learning in Relationship and Context. Since 2008, NAREA and Reggio Children have partnered to bring professional development experiences across North America, gathering educators dedicated to honoring the rights and potential of all children.
At NAREA, we strive to build meaningful connections among educators, support ongoing professional learning, and advance the Reggio Emilia Approach. Each year, we engage in a rich array of activities that include conferences, webinars, traveling exhibitions + ateliers, publications, study groups to Reggio Emilia, global learning journeys, book sales, and new initiatives designed to elevate the rights of both children and adults. Through this work, we enter communities and foster relationships with educators who are shaping schools worthy of children’s and adult’s imagination, intelligence, and dignity.
New Orleans, like many communities, thrives because of people who work with vision, persistence, and a deep commit-ment to building a hopeful future. For more than 6 years, the New Orleans host community has worked tirelessly to bring the Mosaic of Marks, Words, Material exhibition + atelier and this conference to the city, which is a testament to the creativity, dedication, and resilience that defines this remarkable community.
We are honored to welcome Filippo Chieli and Valentina Violi, along with interpreter Jane McCall, from Reggio Emilia, Italy. Their presence enriches our shared understanding of the values and experiences embedded in Reggio Emilia’s municipal infant-toddler centers and preschools. We also extend our gratitude to Louisiana Children’s Museum, St. Martin’s Episcopal School, and Agenda for Children for their generous support in making this gathering possible.
Across North America, we encounter schools at many points along their journeys—schools that open their doors, share their evolving work, and invite the participation of visitors. This generous approach to professional learning, modeled by the municipal schools of Reggio Emilia, reminds us that each community can cultivate its own identity through ongoing study, research, innovation, and collaboration, rather than by following prescriptive models. We are deeply grateful to the children, families, and educators of New Orleans who will welcome us into their schools during the conference.
In Louisiana, people say, “Laissez les bons temps rouler!” or “Let the good times roll!” This joyful expression captures the spirit of the city and echoes the delight we share in exploring, imagining, and learning together. May these days in New Orleans spark new ideas, deepen connections, and awaken the creativity that resides in each of us.
With nostalgia for the future,
NAREA Board and Staff
Featured Speakers

Atelierista
Filippo has been an atelierista at the Ernesto Balducci municipal preschool, Preschools and Infant-Toddler Centers – Istituzione of the Municipality of Reggio Emilia, since 2009 and also collaborated with preschools in the province of Reggio Emilia for 10 years as an atelierista. He works as a consultant, and for Reggio Children he collaborates on professional learning journeys and participates as a speaker in seminars and conferences, in particular on projects in the area of music and sound in Italy and abroad. He is the author of articles published in international educational journals.
He received his diploma in musical studies from Reggio Emilia’s Conservatory of Music, specializing in viola. His educational activities are accompanied by equally significant work as a concert player in classical music groups and groups playing folk-rock and popular traditional music.

Pedagogista
Valentina graduated with a degree in psychology in 2000. She worked as a psychologist from 2003 to 2010, including positions at the University Hospital of Modena in various pediatric wards and as a freelance psychologist. Since 2008, she has worked as a pedagogista, serving as a pedagogical coordinator for Coopselios, the municipality of Reggio Emilia, and Cooperativa Sociale Solidarietà 90. From 2016 to the present, she has been a pedagogista for the Preschools and Infant-Toddler Centers – Istituzione of the Municipality of Reggio Emilia, coordinating early childhood educational services and projects for children with special rights.

Interpreter
Jane has worked as a freelance interpreter and translator for Reggio Children for over 20 years. She has interpreted for Reggio educators at international study groups in Reggio Emilia, Italy, as well as at conferences with Reggio speakers in Australia, New Zealand, United Kingdom, United States, Kuwait, United Arab Emirates, Singapore, South Africa, and China. In addition, Jane translated Loris Malaguzzi’s writings and speeches in Loris Malaguzzi and the Schools of Reggio Emilia. She also translated Vea Vecchi’s writings in Art and Creativity in Reggio Emilia.
Mosaic of Marks, Words, Material



At the core of the Mosaic of Marks, Words, Material exhibition + atelier is the desire to open experiences lived by children as they encounter and navigate communication and mark-making prior to the symbol system of standardized writing and reading.
Drawing and telling stories mean imagining, comparing, analyzing, and exploring spaces, forms, colors, words, metaphors, emotions, rhythms, and pauses, entering into a narrative dimension that is both internal and external to the self, playing on reality, fiction, and interpretation.
For young children, words and stories, silent or spoken, almost always intertwine with drawing, creating an intelligent and often poetic mosaic. The investigations of children and adults that are the subject of this exhibition give us better understanding of the interweaving between mark-making and narration with the aim to restore to drawing, materials, words, and the children all the cognitive and expressive richness they generate.
View the Journey
School Tours
Saturday Only
1:10 Buses Depart
Red Bus Group
1:40–2:40 Green Trees at Isidore Newman School
2:55–3:55 Little Gate at Louise S. McGehee School
Green Bus Group
1:40–2:40 Early Partners
2:55–3:55 Louisiana Children’s Museum
Blue Bus Group
1:40–2:40 Little Gate at Louise S. McGehee School
2:55–3:55 Green Trees at Isidore Newman School
4:00 Buses Return
Download Materials
Prefer to Print Your Materials?
Download and print PDFs here
In an effort to reduce waste, NAREA will provide a printed program onsite, but all other materials will be available digitally. If you’d like to print and bring your own copies, you’re welcome to do so using the links below.
Welcome Letter
Download PDF
Program
Download PDF
Maps
Download PDF
Explore New Orleans
Publications & Resources

CEUs
Requirements:
A required response assignment will be given for each session and will be sent via email to each participant after the conference so that the assignment reflects the content of the chosen session(s)
Four sessions available:
Thursday afternoon (3 hours)
Friday morning (3 hours)
Friday afternoon (3 hours)
Saturday morning (3 hours)
Upcoming NAREA Initiatives

Fundamentals of the Reggio Emilia Approach
3 Recorded + 1 Live Session
April 13 (access opens)
Learn More
Together, we are empowering exceptional education.