Comprehensive AI education guidance for parents and children, making learning safer and more effective
In 1950, being literate meant you could read and write. In 2000, it meant you could also use a computer. In 2025, it means you can understand, use, evaluate, and create with AI.
The Classroom Your Child Sits In Was Designed for a World That No Longer Exists
By 2030, AI Will Be as Fundamental to Education as the Internet Is Today
Everything you need to introduce AI coding to your child — from zero to building a real AI model in one afternoon. Includes a hands-on Teachable Machine project, progression path, and tools for every age group.
Beyond the headlines: a research-backed guide to AI safety for children covering real risks, genuine benefits, and a practical parent framework — informed by UNICEF, the American Academy of Pediatrics, and independent studies.
A complete parent's review of Khanmigo — Khan Academy's AI tutor. We tested it across subjects and grade levels to give you an honest assessment of its features, pricing, and real educational value.
Unlock the full educational potential of ChatGPT with 50 tested prompts for math, science, writing, creative projects, and more — plus step-by-step safety setup for parents.
AI image generators have become spectacularly capable. A child can type "a golden retriever wearing a space suit on the moon" and get a photorealistic image in seconds. This is genuinely exciting —...
Homeschooling families have always had to do more with less — more individualisation, less administrative support; more parental involvement, less institutional resource. AI tools in 2026 don't jus...
For children with learning disabilities, AI isn't just a trend — it can be genuinely life-changing. The same technology that powers chatbots and image generators is, in the right form, giving child...
There's a 9-year-old who has an amazing story in her head — dragons, a secret underground library, a girl who can talk to shadows — but every time she sits down to write it, the blank page wins. Th...
The debate feels binary: embrace AI and risk raising children who can't think independently, or reject it and risk leaving them unprepared for the world they'll actually live in. Neither extreme is...