Apple is expanding its free Today at Apple program this summer with dedicated Apple Camp sessions aimed at children aged 6 to 10 and their families. Registration for the upcoming “Create a Superhero to Help Others on iPad” workshops opens on 1 July via the Apple website. The 90-minute sessions, held at locations including Dubai Mall, focus on hands-on activities using iPad, Apple Pencil Pro, and the Freeform app to encourage drawing, photography, and collaborative storytelling.
Participants work together to design superhero characters and craft short narratives around missions to help others. They combine photos, drawings, emoji, and other elements on Freeform’s flexible canvas, which functions as a shared digital workspace for sketching, organizing ideas, and building simple pinboards. Apple Creative Pros guide the sessions, emphasizing basic creative skills, teamwork, and familiarity with the devices. The program forms part of Today at Apple’s broader series of free learning experiences that cover various aspects of using consumer technology for creation and communication.

These camps reflect the ongoing push by technology companies to engage younger audiences early, positioning tablets and styluses as tools for education and play. In practice, such sessions can introduce useful concepts like digital collaboration and visual storytelling, skills that align with school curricula and everyday digital interaction. However, they also operate within a controlled ecosystem that encourages familiarity with specific hardware and software, raising questions about long-term device dependency and the balance between guided activities and unstructured creative time. Parents may appreciate the structured environment and social aspect, particularly in a busy city like Dubai, yet outcomes depend heavily on how families integrate these experiences with offline play and varied learning methods.
Freeform itself serves as an accessible app for brainstorming and visual organization, supporting a range of file types without requiring advanced technical knowledge. Its strength lies in simplicity and real-time sharing, making it suitable for group settings where children can contribute simultaneously. For many families, the appeal lies in the low-pressure introduction to digital tools that many children already encounter at home or school.
The Apple Camp preview events, such as the recent one at Dubai Mall, offered a glimpse into this format, allowing parents and children to sample the activities firsthand. With registration opening shortly, interested families in the UAE can book spots for the summer schedule. The initiative highlights how consumer electronics brands continue to blend education, entertainment, and product familiarization, a strategy that has become standard across the industry as screens play a larger role in childhood routines.
While these sessions provide a convenient, guided outlet for creativity, their value ultimately rests on moderation and parental involvement. Technology can support imaginative play, but it works best alongside diverse experiences that foster independent problem-solving and physical activity. Families considering the program may find it a useful supplement rather than a standalone solution for developing creative confidence in young children.
