Sacred Geometry School was created by Mark Randle, an author and illustrator with a love of stories, drawing, symbolism, nature, and strange little ideas that somehow turn into books.
Mark creates children’s books that blend adventure, creativity, sacred geometry, and hands-on learning. His work is shaped by ancient symbols, natural patterns, imagination, and the quiet belief that children are capable of far more than they are often given credit for.
Rather than treating learning as something dry or separate from life, Mark creates stories where discovery happens through adventure, mistakes, humour, and practical activity.
Because children often learn best when they are not just told an idea, but invited to draw it, test it, laugh at it, wobble through it, and slowly make it their own.
Especially if a small dog is involved.
Sacred geometry is used here as a playful way to explore pattern, balance, symmetry, focus, and creativity.
Children do not need to be “good at art” or “good at maths” to begin. They only need a pencil, a circle, and the willingness to try the next line.
Education is changing. The future will not belong only to children who can memorise answers, but to those who can notice patterns, think visually, solve problems, and turn ideas into something real.
That is where sacred geometry becomes so useful. It brings together the careful side of learning — rulers, circles, focus, patience — with the imaginative side: beauty, symbolism, curiosity, and the feeling that a whole universe might be hiding inside one simple shape.
Through stories and simple drawing activities, Sacred Geometry School helps children slow down, notice patterns, build confidence, and create something beautiful from small, manageable steps.
There is no rush. There is no perfect first attempt. There is only the next circle, the next line, and perhaps Biscuit sitting slightly too close to the paper.
Mark loves hearing from readers, parents, teachers, students, and fellow lovers of circles, symbols, stories, and slightly wonky first attempts.
Questions, thoughtful messages, collaboration ideas, or kind notes are all welcome.
He makes an effort to reply to meaningful enquiries, though it may take a few days during busy periods.
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