Put a little education in your vacation with the Kingdom Keepers!

Meeting Ridley Parson, author of the Kingdom Keepers series on board the Disney Dream

The Magic Kingdom and other Disney parks seem the last place for anything “dark” to be happening but as fans of the Kingdom Keepers series by author Ridley Pearson know, things aren’t always as they seem!

In the Kingdom Keepers series, Disney employs 5 teenagers – Finn, Maybeck, Philby, Willa and Charleen – to act as the models for a new feature where holographic “tour guides” will guests through the Magic Kingdom. Through some special Disney magic, the teens find that they “automagically” enter the parks each night in hologram form to do battle with the Disney villians – the Overtakers – who are attempting to take over the Disney parks.

Now your children have the opportunity to help the Kingdom Keepers save the magic of the Disney parks from the Overtakers and become immersed in the story like never before! With the Kingdom Keepers Quest from Disney’s Youth Education Series, kids in grades 5-9 have the opportunity to join Finn, Maybeck, Philby, Willa and Charlene as Keepers. The quest takes them through the park solving problems much like Finn and company had to do in the first book, Kingdom Keepers: Disney After Dark.

Each “keeper in training” is given a unique park map that will guide them through the challenge. The group leader explains that the Keepers are in need of help and Wayne, the Disney Imagineer who worked with Walt Disney himself, has designed this quest to see if they have what it takes to become Keepers (in reality, the quest was created and designed by author Ridley Pearson). The kids work together in a small group to solve the puzzles in the quest.

Ridley Pearson says that “the Kingdom Keepers Quest involves problem solving, visualization, observation, creativity, math skills, language arts and critical thinking.” Pearson goes on to say that “by putting the kids in these educational experiences with a book they’ve read and seeing the book come alive, they learn the power of observation, they learn team play and they take a lot of these things and bring them back to the classroom and become better students for it.” (click the link for a video preview of the Kingdom Keepers Quest program!) Continue reading