Parent Track
The hardest thing a parent can do is let a child struggle well.
Home guidance for helping without hovering, supporting without replacing, and building calm norms around AI and learning.
What parents are navigating
Parents today face a quiet but real dilemma. Your child is struggling with homework, and a tool exists that could instantly produce the answer. Your instinct is to help. But what kind of help is this? Is it the kind that opens a path, or the kind that walks the path for them?
Meanwhile, norms around AI are unclear. Other families may be using tools freely. Schools may not have clear guidance. And the pressure to keep up, to not let your child fall behind, to produce good-looking results \u2014 that pressure is constant and real.
Help that opens is different from help that replaces.
What the Parent Track teaches
- One-step help: how to intervene without overtaking
- Protecting weak first movement at the homework table
- Home AI norms and practical family agreements
- Praising evidence and effort, not identity or polish
- Navigating the homework scene without anxiety spirals
- Family language that supports formation
- Understanding what your child is actually building when they struggle
- Implementation planning for your household
Outcomes
- A clear framework for when and how to help with homework and projects
- Practical home norms for AI, devices, and learning tools
- Language shifts that support struggle without abandoning your child
- Confidence that letting your child struggle is not neglect but care
- A family plan you can actually implement
Parent workshops are available as evening sessions, parent group workshops, and community events. They can be delivered for individual parent groups, school communities, churches, or other organizations.