Nghệ thuật AI: 🟦 Panel 1: Sensorimotor Stage (0–2 years) Scene: Baby Jewel (in a diaper) sits on the floor with a rattle. He looks surprised as the rattle rolls under the couch. Mom is doing peek-a-boo in the background. Caption (below): “Jewel discovers that things still exist… even when she can’t see them!” Speech bubble: Mom: “Peek-a-boo!” Jewel: “Wha—where did it go?” 🟪 Panel 2: Preoperational Stage (2–7 years) Scene: Young Jewel (around 4) sits at a tiny tea table with a teddy bear and an invisible friend. She's talking to the bear. Caption (below): “Jewel believes her teddy bear has feelings and talks back.” Speech bubble: Jewel: “Don’t be sad, Mr. Bear, you’ll get the biggest cookie!” (Optional bubble from bear, imaginary): “Thank you, Jewel!” 🟩 Panel 3: Concrete Operational Stage (7–11 years) Scene: 9-year-old Jewel is at a school science desk with two glasses of water—one tall and one wide. A confused classmate is next to her. Caption (below): “Jewel understands that things don’t change just because they look different.” Speech bubble: Classmate: “This one looks like more!” Jewel: “Nope! Same amount—just a different shape!” 🟥 Panel 4: Formal Operational Stage (12+ years) Scene: Teen Jewel (15) is sitting in a cozy bedroom at a desk, writing in a journal. She has posters of planets and justice scales on the wall. Thought bubble overhead. Caption (below): “Jewel starts thinking about abstract ideas like justice and the universe.” Thought bubble: “What if time is just a human construct?” “Why do people have to be treated unfairly?” 🟦 Panel 1: Sensorimotor Stage (0–2 years) Scene: Baby Jewel (in a diaper) sits on the floor with a rattle. He looks surprised as the rattle rolls under the couch. Mom is doing peek-a-boo in the background. Caption (below): “Jewel discovers that things still exist… even when she can’t see them!” Speech bubble: Mom: “Peek-a-boo!” Jewel: “Wha—where did it go?” 🟪 Panel 2: Preoperational Stage (2–7 years) Scene: Young Jewel (around 4) sits at a tiny tea table with a teddy bear and an invisible friend. She's talking to the bear. Caption (below): “Jewel believes her teddy bear has feelings and talks back.” Speech bubble: Jewel: “Don’t be sad, Mr. Bear, you’ll get the biggest cookie!” (Optional bubble from bear, imaginary): “Thank you, Jewel!” 🟩 Panel 3: Concrete Operational Stage (7–11 years) Scene: 9-year-old Jewel is at a school science desk with two glasses of water—one tall and one wide. A confused classmate is next to her. Caption (below): “Jewel understands that things don’t change just because they look different.” Speech bubble: Classmate: “This one looks like more!” Jewel: “Nope! Same amount—just a different shape!” 🟥 Panel 4: Formal Operational Stage (12+ years) Scene: Teen Jewel (15) is sitting in a cozy bedroom at a desk, writing in a journal. She has posters of planets and justice scales on the wall. Thought bubble overhead. Caption (below): “Jewel starts thinking about abstract ideas like justice and the universe.” Thought bubble: “What if time is just a human construct?” “Why do people have to be treated unfairly?”

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🟦 Panel 1: Sensorimotor Stage (0–2 years)

Scene: Baby Jewel (in a diaper) sits on the floor with a rattle. He looks surprised as the rattle rolls under the couch. Mom is doing peek-a-boo in the background.

Caption (below): “Jewel discovers that things still exist… even when she can’t see them!”

Speech bubble:

Mom: “Peek-a-boo!”

Jewel: “Wha—where did it go?”

🟪 Panel 2: Preoperational Stage (2–7 years)

Scene: Young Jewel (around 4) sits at a tiny tea table with a teddy bear and an invisible friend. She's talking to the bear.

Caption (below): “Jewel believes her teddy bear has feelings and talks back.”

Speech bubble:

Jewel: “Don’t be sad, Mr. Bear, you’ll get the biggest cookie!”

(Optional bubble from bear, imaginary): “Thank you, Jewel!”

🟩 Panel 3: Concrete Operational Stage (7–11 years)

Scene: 9-year-old Jewel is at a school science desk with two glasses of water—one tall and one wide. A confused classmate is next to her.

Caption (below): “Jewel understands that things don’t change just because they look different.”

Speech bubble:

Classmate: “This one looks like more!”

Jewel: “Nope! Same amount—just a different shape!”

🟥 Panel 4: Formal Operational Stage (12+ years)

Scene: Teen Jewel (15) is sitting in a cozy bedroom at a desk, writing in a journal. She has posters of planets and justice scales on the wall. Thought bubble overhead.

Caption (below): “Jewel starts thinking about abstract ideas like justice and the universe.”

Thought bubble:

“What if time is just a human construct?”

“Why do people have to be treated unfairly?”
🟦 Panel 1: Sensorimotor Stage (0–2 years)

Scene: Baby Jewel (in a diaper) sits on the floor with a rattle. He looks surprised as the rattle rolls under the couch. Mom is doing peek-a-boo in the background.

Caption (below): “Jewel discovers that things still exist… even when she can’t see them!”

Speech bubble:

Mom: “Peek-a-boo!”

Jewel: “Wha—where did it go?”

🟪 Panel 2: Preoperational Stage (2–7 years)

Scene: Young Jewel (around 4) sits at a tiny tea table with a teddy bear and an invisible friend. She's talking to the bear.

Caption (below): “Jewel believes her teddy bear has feelings and talks back.”

Speech bubble:

Jewel: “Don’t be sad, Mr. Bear, you’ll get the biggest cookie!”

(Optional bubble from bear, imaginary): “Thank you, Jewel!”

🟩 Panel 3: Concrete Operational Stage (7–11 years)

Scene: 9-year-old Jewel is at a school science desk with two glasses of water—one tall and one wide. A confused classmate is next to her.

Caption (below): “Jewel understands that things don’t change just because they look different.”

Speech bubble:

Classmate: “This one looks like more!”

Jewel: “Nope! Same amount—just a different shape!”

🟥 Panel 4: Formal Operational Stage (12+ years)

Scene: Teen Jewel (15) is sitting in a cozy bedroom at a desk, writing in a journal. She has posters of planets and justice scales on the wall. Thought bubble overhead.

Caption (below): “Jewel starts thinking about abstract ideas like justice and the universe.”

Thought bubble:

“What if time is just a human construct?”

“Why do people have to be treated unfairly?”
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🟦 Panel 1: Sensorimotor Stage (0–2 years) Scene: Baby Jewel (in a diaper) sits on the floor with a rattle. He looks surprised as the rattle rolls under the couch. Mom is doing peek-a-boo in the background. Caption (below): “Jewel discovers that things still exist… even when she can’t see them!” Speech bubble: Mom: “Peek-a-boo!” Jewel: “Wha—where did it go?” 🟪 Panel 2: Preoperational Stage (2–7 years) Scene: Young Jewel (around 4) sits at a tiny tea table with a teddy bear and an invisible friend. She's talking to the bear. Caption (below): “Jewel believes her teddy bear has feelings and talks back.” Speech bubble: Jewel: “Don’t be sad, Mr. Bear, you’ll get the biggest cookie!” (Optional bubble from bear, imaginary): “Thank you, Jewel!” 🟩 Panel 3: Concrete Operational Stage (7–11 years) Scene: 9-year-old Jewel is at a school science desk with two glasses of water—one tall and one wide. A confused classmate is next to her. Caption (below): “Jewel understands that things don’t change just because they look different.” Speech bubble: Classmate: “This one looks like more!” Jewel: “Nope! Same amount—just a different shape!” 🟥 Panel 4: Formal Operational Stage (12+ years) Scene: Teen Jewel (15) is sitting in a cozy bedroom at a desk, writing in a journal. She has posters of planets and justice scales on the wall. Thought bubble overhead. Caption (below): “Jewel starts thinking about abstract ideas like justice and the universe.” Thought bubble: “What if time is just a human construct?” “Why do people have to be treated unfairly?” 🟦 Panel 1: Sensorimotor Stage (0–2 years) Scene: Baby Jewel (in a diaper) sits on the floor with a rattle. He looks surprised as the rattle rolls under the couch. Mom is doing peek-a-boo in the background. Caption (below): “Jewel discovers that things still exist… even when she can’t see them!” Speech bubble: Mom: “Peek-a-boo!” Jewel: “Wha—where did it go?” 🟪 Panel 2: Preoperational Stage (2–7 years) Scene: Young Jewel (around 4) sits at a tiny tea table with a teddy bear and an invisible friend. She's talking to the bear. Caption (below): “Jewel believes her teddy bear has feelings and talks back.” Speech bubble: Jewel: “Don’t be sad, Mr. Bear, you’ll get the biggest cookie!” (Optional bubble from bear, imaginary): “Thank you, Jewel!” 🟩 Panel 3: Concrete Operational Stage (7–11 years) Scene: 9-year-old Jewel is at a school science desk with two glasses of water—one tall and one wide. A confused classmate is next to her. Caption (below): “Jewel understands that things don’t change just because they look different.” Speech bubble: Classmate: “This one looks like more!” Jewel: “Nope! Same amount—just a different shape!” 🟥 Panel 4: Formal Operational Stage (12+ years) Scene: Teen Jewel (15) is sitting in a cozy bedroom at a desk, writing in a journal. She has posters of planets and justice scales on the wall. Thought bubble overhead. Caption (below): “Jewel starts thinking about abstract ideas like justice and the universe.” Thought bubble: “What if time is just a human construct?” “Why do people have to be treated unfairly?”

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