Origami Rocket Evolution

A Brooklyn Kid Forgot the Steps.

Then Built a System So No One Else Would.

Origami Evolution teaches the step-by-step method — FAA Aeronautical Decision-Making principles, adapted for ages 8 and up.

Learn it.

Master it.

Teach three others.

| ✈ FAA Aeronautical Decision-Making Methodology  |  📚 2nd Edition Published  |  ✅  | 🔬 111-Student FERPA Study with Swim Strong Foundation |  🎪 Maker Faire Coney Island 2025 | 

LEARN THE SYSTEM

4 paper aircraft models built on one foundational technique. Math, precision, aviation thinking. Two animation methods: Craft Stick and Marionette.

STAY SAFE

Developing water safety teaching tools with the same checkpoint methodology as the origami system. Developed with Swim Strong Foundation.

TEACH OTHERS

Operation Playtalion™: learn it, practice it, pass it on. Every learner teaches three. A battalion of 1,000 creative teachers.

What is Operation Playtalion™?

The name combines ‘play’ with ‘battalion’ — a unit of 1,000. Not soldiers. Creative teachers. Each person who learns the system is encouraged to teach three others, who teach three more. That’s how a Brooklyn paper rocket becomes a movement.

Brooklyn-tested method that builds confidence through aviation-grade educational principles.

From one 6-year-old's paper rocket to a complete learning system.

Various colorful origami creations arranged on a black surface with a dark background, including paper boats, flowers, stars, and a geometric pyramid structure.

THREE PILLARS OF TRANSFORMATION

The Method / FAA Aeronautical Decision-Making principles, adapted for ages 8 and up

Real Confidence / Built fold by fold — not given, earned

Origami whale hanging from thin strings over sheets of colored paper.

Operation Playtalion™ / Learn it. Master it. Teach three others.

What the system actually does

My son went from "the quiet kid" in 3rd grade to confidently teaching origami to classmates by 5th grade. The change wasn't about origami—it was about systematic learning building genuine confidence.

"That's what he told me himself: everyone started seeing him as 'the origami kid' instead of just the smart kid."

Two hands holding paper foil and paper airplane models, outdoors near grass and bushes.
Person holding a gray paper boat in the foreground, walking on a sidewalk in a residential neighborhood with trees, parked cars, and a child with a backpack walking ahead.

Start here. It's free.

The first chapter of Origami Rocket: Evolution — free. No signup required. See the method before you buy.

Building communities of kind leaders through systematic learning