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A Place to Call Home
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Hilal Isler didn't expect to find a fulfilling community in Texas, but Mueller quickly welcomed her home.
This content was created in partnership with Thinkery.
On any given day in Mueller, curiosity is everywhere. Children test ideas, ask questions, and discover on their own. Long before benchmarks or career paths appear, these moments shape how children think, solve problems, and begin to see themselves as capable learners.
At Thinkery, curiosity is the starting point for every experience.
Located in the heart of Mueller and welcoming families from across the Austin area, Thinkery is a hands-on children’s museum where learning happens through play. Children move from tinkering with simple machines in the Innovators’ Workshop to exploring light and color in the Light Lab. Each experience is designed to spark imagination, encourage exploration, and make learning fun and meaningful.
STEAM Learning
Through play-based STEAM learning, which stands for Science, Technology, Engineering, Art, and Math, children engage with these disciplines as connected ways of thinking rather than separate subjects. They investigate the world around them, use technology to design and test ideas, apply engineering principles to hands-on challenges, express ideas creatively, and use math to reason and solve problems.
We do not teach subjects in isolation,” says Alexa Clavijo, Senior Play & Learning Manager at Thinkery. “STEAM is a mindset. It is about creativity, problem solving, and making connections to real life.”
Thinkery’s exhibits and programs invite children to take risks, ask questions, and learn through trial and error. Spaces are intentionally designed so every child feels welcome and empowered. Children work with real tools, including scissors, cardboard cutters, robotics kits, and circuit blocks, transforming ideas into tangible creations and building confidence as they learn how things work.
Play Builds Skills for Life
Play is not a break from learning. It is how learning happens. According to the American Academy of Pediatrics, play supports physical, cognitive, social, and emotional development while strengthening executive function and problem-solving skills. Research from LEGO Education shows that hands-on learning is more engaging and effective than traditional instruction.
When adults encourage curiosity through play, children practice decision making, collaboration, communication, and adaptability. These skills extend far beyond childhood and remain valuable no matter how technology or careers evolve. At Thinkery, play is the foundation for developing these lifelong abilities.
Balancing Exploration and Structure
Finding the right balance between open-ended exploration and guided learning can be a challenge for caregivers. At Thinkery, the two work together. Open-ended experiences allow children to follow their interests, while educator guidance, thoughtful prompts, and intentionally designed spaces deepen learning.
Caregivers are encouraged to participate by observing, narrating, and extending play at home. These shared experiences strengthen family connections and reinforce the idea that learning can be enjoyable, ongoing, and accessible.
Learning for Every Child
Thinkery primarily serves children from birth through age 11, but its play-based approach supports a wide range of learners. Children engage at their own pace, develop social and cognitive skills, and learn alongside peers. Neurodivergent children and those with different learning styles are encouraged to follow their interests and take the lead in their learning experiences.
Supporting Families and Educators
Caregivers are essential partners in learning, and Thinkery offers a welcoming space beyond home and school where families can play and learn together. Recognizing that play is learning helps relieve the pressure to create perfect activities. Simple moments, like stacking blocks or exploring balance, support language development and strengthen family bonds.
Thinkery also extends its impact through the STEAM Learning Institute, which partners with educators, researchers, and community organizations to study play-based, child-centered learning. This work supports professional development and brings innovative, inclusive approaches to classrooms and learning spaces across Central Texas.
At Thinkery, every visit invites children to explore, invent, and learn. The 40,000-square-foot museum offers hands-on exhibits and other programs, including family nights, field trips, and birthday celebrations. As part of the LEGO Playful Learning Museum Network, Thinkery draws on global research to ensure experiences remain engaging and relevant for all children.
Visit Thinkery in Mueller to explore exhibits, join programs, and celebrate learning through play. To learn more about Thinkery memberships, which include free general admission, exclusive benefits, and flexible options for families of any size, visit www.thinkeryaustin.org.
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THERE'S NO SHORTAGE of talent here in Mueller, and one of our newest neighbors, Hilal Isler, is proof of that. She recently moved to the neighborhood with her husband, Volkan, and their 14-year-old son.
The family relocated to Austin when Volkan accepted a position as a professor in the University of Texas Department of Computer Science. As luck would have it, the move came with an opportunity for Hilal, too. A PhD graduate from the University of Pennsylvania, she previously taught social justice at the University of Minnesota and now serves as an associate professor of Instruction in UT’s Department of Curriculum and Instruction.
We met at a neighborhood park on a crisp, sunny November morning, the kind of day that reminds you why people fall in love with Texas winters. Naturally, our conversation began with the weather.
“The snow gets old!” Hilal says with a grin, after 17 years in Minnesota. When I asked about her first impression of Austin, her answer came easily.
“As soon as we arrived at the airport, there was a live band playing. We knew right away we were in a special place.”
They visited in the spring, a fun time to be in Austin with sunshine and mild weather as opposed to snow and gray skies. They searched for homes close to the university and loved many of the central Austin neighborhoods that they visited, like Hyde Park. But, ultimately, they fell hard for the charm of Mueller. I asked her what they love most about it.
“We love that Mueller is walkable, diverse, and family-oriented,” she says. “There’s such a strong sense of community here, and the parks and green spaces are beautiful.”
“I also love the Farmers’ Market, the whole vibe of it with kids playing and music in the background. It’s so special,” she adds. “And H-E-B! What a revelation!”
International History
Long before Minnesota, Isler’s story had already spanned continents. Born in Australia to Turkish parents (both professors), she was raised in Canada, Riyadh, and Turkey.
“As a kid, I didn’t like moving so much,” she admits. “I was shy, and it was hard to make friends. But now I see it was a blessing in disguise.”
Through all those moves, she discovered that books and libraries were the constants that grounded her. No matter which city landed in, she could always seek out libraries and find a good book to read. That love of stories and sense of cultural in-between-ness eventually inspired her debut novel, “Har Mar,” which released in July of 2025.
“I wrote these stories partly out of frustration,” she explains. “I didn’t see authentic portrayals of my part of the world. What I found often felt reductionist. I wanted to tell the stories of the women I knew to broaden the conversation.”
Isler’s writing has appeared in Rolling Stone India, The Guardian (US), The Paris Review, and many other well-known publications. A 2023 McKnight Fellow in Creative Prose, she has written countless articles and essays. Her global perspective gives her work a rare blend of empathy and insight, exploring borders, identity, and the Turkish diaspora with a voice both lyrical and wise.
Now, as she settles into life in Austin, Isler continues to teach, write, and explore her new community. Her story reminds us that every neighbor brings a world of experiences with them and that’s exactly what makes Mueller such a rich, welcoming place to call home.
Photograph courtesy of the Hilal family
