AI literacy for parents
What AI literacy means, why it matters, and calm conversations that build privacy, verification, and authorship habits.
Read the guideResearch-backed guides and practical activities for parents, educators, and curious learners. Understand how AI works, use it more safely, and keep human judgment in the driver’s seat.
Chatbot use is already common, but “use” can mean everything from checking a math problem to discussing something personal. This guide separates the numbers, the risks, and the practical response for families.
Read the evidencePew Research Center survey of 1,458 U.S. teens ages 13–17 and their parents, conducted September–October 2025. Margin of error ±3.3 percentage points.
What AI literacy means, why it matters, and calm conversations that build privacy, verification, and authorship habits.
Read the guidePractical boundaries for personal information, schoolwork, emotional support, unsafe output, and incident response.
Read the safety guideA flexible sequence with learning goals, discussion prompts, offline options, assessment, and age adjustments.
View the lesson planUseful definitions and examples for AI, machine learning, language models, hallucinations, bias, training data, and prompts.
Explore the glossaryPractise checking a claim, protecting personal information, defining authorship, and choosing when not to use AI.
Print the worksheetSee the understand, practise, reflect, and apply methodology behind the app and the Learning Hub.
Read our methodology