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.
Our goal is to help thoughtful parents make intentional decisions about navigating childhood in a digital-first world
No judgment. No one-size-fits-all advice. Just personalized insights based on your unique family
See how your family compares to others in your school, city, and beyond. Make informed decisions with real context.
Curated content from child development experts, digital wellness researchers, and trusted organizations.
Connect with like-minded parents and see what's working for families with similar values and situations.
"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
Three simple steps to transform digital chaos into confident parenting decisions.
Tell us about your child's current digital habits. Screen time, apps, games, independence milestones. Takes just 5 minutes.
See how your family compares to others in your school, city, and beyond. No judgment, just helpful context and insights.
Get personalized resources, expert insights, and practical next steps tailored to your specific concerns and goals.
Unlock school-level calibration data — and help us keep Screenwise free for all families.
• 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).
• 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
• 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.
Here's a sample of the personalized insights and resources you'll receive after completing your calibration.
John's digital engagement resembles a typical 6th grader's pattern. 2 areas differ from 4th grade peers—explore these sections for family discussion.
John's usage patterns compared across geographic communities
John's video consumption is primarily unsupervised YouTube, which is typical for older students but notable for 4th grade.
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.
John's texting usage falls within normal ranges, primarily with family members as expected for his age group, with no group chat participation yet.
John has supervised smartphone access and moderate iPad usage, which is appropriate and slightly below average independence for his grade level.
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.
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.
*Preliminary results* pending further submissions from the community
Multi-platform gaming habits and social interactions
Independent viewing and cowatching balance
Device access and supervision patterns
Messaging habits and social connections
Social platform usage and digital safety practices
Movie and TV viewing habits across platforms
Screen time patterns and shared viewing potential
Educational apps and information-seeking habits
Emerging technology usage and digital literacy
Digital autonomy and milestone development
Family practices and digital wellness approaches
Curated resources based on John's digital profile and areas of interest
The surprising cognitive benefits hidden in those endless building sessions—plus the red flags every parent should know
Common Sense Media
Step-by-step walkthrough to lock down chat, spending, and privacy settings. Includes screenshots of every menu you need to find.
Dr. Cheryl Olson, Harvard Medical School
Research shows Roblox developers (some as young as 13) are earning six figures. Here's how the platform teaches entrepreneurship, coding, and financial literacy.
Jenny Radesky, MD & Dimitri Christakis, MD
Two pediatric experts discuss when creative gaming becomes problematic, how to spot addiction warning signs, and why some kids thrive in virtual worlds.
What neuroscience reveals about viral content addiction—and how to harness the dopamine hits for good
Dr. Jenny Radesky, University of Michigan C.S. Mott Children's Hospital
Why challenge videos trigger such intense engagement in developing brains, plus practical strategies for parents to discuss money, generosity, and viral fame with kids.
Dr. Anna Lembke, Stanford Addiction Medicine
A 15-minute explanation of how recommendation algorithms exploit the brain's reward system, featuring real brain scans and practical 'digital detox' strategies.
Jonathan Haidt, NYU Stern School of Business
Chapter 8 specifically examines how challenge culture and extreme content normalize risk-taking behavior in adolescents. Includes discussion guides for families.
The new rules of learning in an AI world—plus scripts for the conversations every family needs to have
International Society for Technology in Education (ISTE)
Official guidelines used by 50+ school districts. Covers when AI assistance is appropriate, how to cite AI sources, and red-line behaviors that constitute cheating.
Alex Sarlin & Ben Kornell
Interviews with teachers, students, and AI researchers about how ChatGPT is changing homework, testing, and critical thinking skills. Episode includes parent action items.
MIT Media Lab & Scratch Foundation
Age-appropriate activities to help kids understand AI limitations, bias, and the importance of human verification. Includes downloadable family discussion cards.
Research reveals the surprising connection between offline independence and online safety skills
Lenore Skenazy
The foundational guide to building real-world confidence. Chapter 12 specifically addresses how offline independence translates to better digital decision-making and reduced online risk-taking.
Lenore Skenazy & Peter Gray
Weekly episodes featuring real families who've found the balance between digital engagement and physical world exploration. Includes age-by-age independence checklists.
Dr. Peter Gray, Boston College
Longitudinal study of 1,200 families shows kids with more offline autonomy make better online choices. Includes practical strategies for building both types of independence simultaneously.
Why Gen Alpha's absurdist memes are developmentally normal—and when to worry about online culture influence
Dr. Doris Bergen, Miami University Center for Human Development
Why kids 6-12 are drawn to nonsensical content, how it supports cognitive development, and when 'weird' humor becomes concerning. Includes red flags for parents.
PBS Parents & Dr. Ellen Selkie, University of Michigan
12-minute deep dive into meme culture psychology, featuring real examples kids love and expert analysis of their developmental benefits and risks.
Devorah Heitner, PhD
Episode 47 specifically tackles how to engage with your child's online interests without judgment, plus strategies for staying connected across generational digital divides.