Why "learn to code" is already outdated advice, what took its place, and what AI amplified instead of replacing.
Parenting in the Age of AI Course
Your kid will graduate into a world where AI does the technical work. What's left is thinking clearly, reading people, spotting nonsense, and making someone care about what you built. This course teaches all of that through dinner conversations, family projects, and games you already have time for.
What's inside
10 lessons with illustrated guides and audio narration.
People rarely say what they need, which means the kid who learns to read between the lines has an edge in every room. Role reversal games and dinner conversations turn this into a daily habit.
Things that look unrelated usually aren't. This lesson uses moments your family already has to make feedback loops, dependencies, and second-order consequences click without a whiteboard.
AI can build anything you describe, which makes describing things precisely the skill that matters most. This lesson builds articulation through games, errands, and conversations where vague doesn't cut it.
Your kid already gets health advice from TikTok and history lessons from YouTube shorts. This lesson builds the habit of tracing claims to their source, checking evidence, and deciding what holds up.
AI can generate fifty versions of anything in seconds. The kid who makes someone stop and pay attention to one wins. This lesson covers persuasion that starts with understanding what the other person wants.
Every tool now gives you more options than you can evaluate. This lesson builds taste: forming standards, developing preferences you can explain, and knowing why you chose what you chose.
"I want to build a fort" is easy to say. Getting there requires steps, sequence, and trade-offs, which is what family projects with visible planning teach without a lecture.
Every family needs rules for when and how AI gets used. This lesson helps you build a "think first, then direct the machine" culture that fits your kids' ages.
Most of us weren't taught these skills either. This lesson covers how to sustain the practice and turn it into a family identity that outlasts the course.
Grounded in developmental science. Not just our opinion.
Which skills are trainable at which age, how children develop systems thinking, when critical reasoning emerges. That comes from decades of developmental psychology research. We studied the science, then built activities that work in real family life.
Full refund
Self-paced
Secure Checkout
Questions parents ask first
7 Skills Cheat Sheet
a one-page guide to the seven skills AI made essential — with one starter activity for each. Print it, put it on the fridge.





