Valuable Players in Community

A guided exhibit experience that helps college students understand systems and become stronger contributors in community.

Free Exhibit Booking

Guided Exhibits

Interactive campus stations

Six Core Roles

Mayor, Bank, Education, Employment, Real Estate, Police.

Community Ready

Systems insight, reflection, action

Mayor

The mayor station helps students examine civic power, public priorities, and the value of a vote. They see how communities organize around shared needs—and how disinterest, pressure, or unequal influence can shape what gets heard.

Bank

At the bank, students encounter how loans, wages, repayment, and account status shape what becomes possible. The station makes visible how financial institutions influence mobility, security, and future choices.

Education

This station asks students to weigh educational pathways in relation to cost, opportunity, and future work. They see that education is not only personal aspiration, but a structural gateway that affects later access to employment and stability.

Employment

At employment, students see how jobs are linked to prior decisions, credentials, and institutional records. The station shows how work is shaped not only by effort, but by systems that sort people into unequal economic positions.

Real Estate

The housing station reveals how employment, income, and social position shape where people can live. Students confront how access to stable housing is structured unevenly across the world they are navigating.

Police

The police station reveals how rules, surveillance, and punishment shape everyday life. Students confront how unequal enforcement can limit opportunity, restrict movement, and affect later access to work and stability.

We Bring It to You

A simple one-day mobile exhibit designed for campuses, student centers, libraries, and event spaces

God’s Little World arrives as a guided six-station setup that our team brings, installs, and manages on site. Schools provide the date, time, and location; we handle the exhibit materials, orientation packet, signage, and student-facing flow.

One-day setup

Six kiosk stations

Small footprint, guided by our team

Concept rendering of a six-kiosk college installation

What Students LearnHow Systems Shape LifeHow Communities Change

Bring It to Campus

For Hosts

A guided exhibit experience that helps students understand systems, reflect critically, and become more valuable contributors in community.

Benefits:
  • Student engagement

  • Experiential learning

  • Flexible one-day setup

For Sponsors

Support a practical, community-centered learning experience that expands student access and strengthens campus-based public engagement.

Impact:
  • Free student participation

  • Station and equipment support

  • Pilot expansion

Upcoming Free Campus Experiences

Community Colleges

Arizona

Free gifts and packets

Summer 2026

Morning to afternoon

Arizona
Texas HBCUs

Texas

Free gifts and packets

Fall 2026

Morning to afternoon

Texas
Campus + Community Partners

USA

Free gifts and packets

Spring 2027

Morning to afternoon

USA

Why This Learning Matters

Simulations matter because they can re-present social systems in a form students can actually examine. In God’s Little World, that means students do not only hear about inequality—they encounter processes, consequences, and alternative possibilities in a structured environment.

— Boocock & Schild

Simulation pedagogy

A strong simulation helps learners test decisions, analyze consequences with some distance, and make mistakes without paying full real-life costs. That is part of what makes experiential learning intellectually serious and socially useful.

— Boocock & Schild

Educational simulation theory

This kind of learning matters because students are placed inside a world that asks them to respond. As they confront systems, roles, and constraints, reflection becomes more concrete, and community questions become harder to ignore.

— Paulo Freire tradition

Critical reflection and action

Bring God’s Little World to Your Campus