Go from
"Skibidi, huh?"
to Sigma Parent

Your kid wants Roblox. Their friends are doing TikTok dances. You thought YouTube Kids was safe.

There's fomo about the 5th grader group chat. Aura farming? What's a Minecraft server? Duolingo must be pure good, right??

We've got you.

Our kids are growing up in a digital-first world and it's only accelerating. Get your personalized digital wellness report and make confident choices for your own family, with your community.

⏱️5-min survey
🔒 Anonymous
📊 Instant insights
🌱For self-calibration not judgement
👌 Free!
Screenwise
Want to save your results?
Learn from 2M+ Families

Our goal is to help thoughtful parents make intentional decisions about navigating childhood in a digital-first world

Why Parents Love Screenwise

No judgment. No one-size-fits-all advice. Just personalized insights based on your unique family

Data insights chart

Data-Driven Insights

See how your family compares to others in your school, city, and beyond. Make informed decisions with real context.

Expert resources books

Expert-Backed Resources

Curated content from child development experts, digital wellness researchers, and trusted organizations.

Community of families

Community Calibration

Connect with like-minded parents and see what's working for families with similar values and situations.

Trusted by Parents Everywhere

"Finally understand the difference between creative Minecraft servers and the toxic ones. This changed everything for our family."

— Sarah M., Parent of 3rd grader

"Our whole class took the 'Wait Until 8th' pledge after seeing the data. Community action works!"

— Michael R., Parent of 5th grader

"Now I know why my kid loves those weird YouTube videos. We watch educational creators together instead."

— Jennifer L., Parent of 4th grader

Take Intentional Action

Three simple steps to transform digital chaos into confident parenting decisions.

Clipboard

Quick Survey

Tell us about your child's current digital habits. Screen time, apps, games, independence milestones. Takes just 5 minutes.

Compass

Get Calibrated

See how your family compares to others in your school, city, and beyond. No judgment, just helpful context and insights.

Path to hill with flag

Take Action

Get personalized resources, expert insights, and practical next steps tailored to your specific concerns and goals.

Pricing

Unlock school-level calibration data — and help us keep Screenwise free for all families.

Free

$0 :)

• City/state/global calibration report.

• Full access to the Screenwise AI guide for 14 days.

• Access to 5 Screenwise reviews a month (games, movies, shows, apps, influencers channels, books, more).

Community

$7.99 (one-time)

• Unlock school-level calibration in your report and AI guide.

• A small fee acts as a gate to alllow us to ensure that the school-level data is genuine and reliable

Family

$12.99/mo

• Access the full Screenwise guide to every game, show, movie, app, channel, book, trend or anything you ask for.

• On-demand full access to the digital wellness AI guide.

• Screenwise+ subscribers help keep Screenwise calibrations free for all families.

See What You'll Get

Here's a sample of the personalized insights and resources you'll receive after completing your calibration.

Screenwise Logo
SAMPLE
Digital Wellness Calibration
John G
4th grade
Redwood Day School
Oakland, CA
John has the media diet of a 6th grader in Oakland
This isn't judgment—it's awareness. And from awareness, follows intentionality.

Highlights and Areas to Learn More

Media Diet Analysis: 6th Grade Pattern

John's digital engagement resembles a typical 6th grader's pattern. 2 areas differ from 4th grade peers—explore these sections for family discussion.

MinecraftYOU ●
No (35%)
Offline (40%)
Online (25%)
YouTubeYOU ●
No (20%)
Supervised (35%)
Solo (45%)

Areas to Explore (Different from 4th Grade Peers)

Minecraft usage patterns
YouTube usage patterns

Comprehensive Digital Activity Summary

John's usage patterns compared across geographic communities

Grade Level4th
K
1st
2nd
3rd
4th
5th
6th
7th
8th
9th
10th
11th
12th

Video Platforms

John's video consumption is primarily unsupervised YouTube, which is typical for older students but notable for 4th grade.

YouTubeJohn
no usage: 32%supervised: 18%solo: 50%
YouTube KidsJohn
no usage: 55%usage: 45%

Gaming

John's gaming patterns show heavy server-based play in Minecraft and Roblox, with no exposure to mature content like GTA or COD, indicating age-appropriate gaming choices.

MinecraftJohn
no usage: 35%offline: 30%servers: 35%
RobloxJohn
no usage: 30%offline: 15%servers: 55%
Call of DutyJohn
no usage: 80%offline: 10%online: 10%
GTAJohn
no usage: 82%usage: 18%
FortniteJohn
no usage: 60%offline: 15%friends: 15%everyone: 10%
Mario Kart/Animal CrossingJohn
no usage: 35%usage: 65%

Communication

John's texting usage falls within normal ranges, primarily with family members as expected for his age group, with no group chat participation yet.

TextingJohn
no usage: 45%family: 25%friends: 20%groups: 10%
Group ChatsJohn
no usage: 55%school: 25%adhoc: 20%

Devices

John has supervised smartphone access and moderate iPad usage, which is appropriate and slightly below average independence for his grade level.

SmartphoneJohn
no usage: 65%supervised: 25%independent: 10%
Phone GamesJohn
no usage: 45%puzzles: 30%advanced: 25%
SmartwatchJohn
no usage: 55%supervised: 25%independent: 20%
iPadJohn
no usage: 12%limited: 30%unsupervised: 58%

Independence

John shows no independent mobility yet, which is typical for his grade and geographic area, with most peers still requiring supervision for outings and school transport.

Unsupervised OutingsJohn
no usage: 65%supervised: 22%independent: 13%
Walk to/from SchoolJohn
no usage: 42%supervised: 33%independent: 25%

Learning

John has moderate engagement with educational apps like Khan Academy but hasn't started language learning tools like Duolingo, which is common for his grade level.

DuolingoJohn
no usage: 60%usage: 40%
Khan AcademyJohn
no usage: 45%usage: 55%

*Preliminary results* pending further submissions from the community

Priority Areas

Gaming

Multi-platform gaming habits and social interactions

YouTube and YouTube Kids

Independent viewing and cowatching balance

Technology Access

Device access and supervision patterns

Further Calibration

Communication Patterns

Messaging habits and social connections

Social Media & Digital Citizenship

Social platform usage and digital safety practices

Streaming & Entertainment

Movie and TV viewing habits across platforms

Screen Time Calibration

Screen time patterns and shared viewing potential

Learning & Research Tools

Educational apps and information-seeking habits

AI & Technology Interaction

Emerging technology usage and digital literacy

Independence Profile

Digital autonomy and milestone development

Family Digital Culture

Family practices and digital wellness approaches

Bookmarks Library

Curated resources based on John's digital profile and areas of interest

Gaming

Why Your Kid's Roblox Obsession Might Actually Be Building Their Future

The surprising cognitive benefits hidden in those endless building sessions—plus the red flags every parent should know

Video

The MrBeast Effect: Why Challenge Videos Are Rewiring Your Kid's Brain

What neuroscience reveals about viral content addiction—and how to harness the dopamine hits for good

AI & Learning

ChatGPT Did My Kid's Homework: When AI Help Becomes Academic Cheating

The new rules of learning in an AI world—plus scripts for the conversations every family needs to have

Independence

The Digital Independence Paradox: Why Screen-Smart Kids Need Real-World Freedom

Research reveals the surprising connection between offline independence and online safety skills

Video

Decoding 'Skibidi Toilet': What Your Kid's Weird Humor Actually Means

Why Gen Alpha's absurdist memes are developmentally normal—and when to worry about online culture influence