Admit it đ the first time you saw your child using ChatGPT to do their history homework or to write an essay, it probably gave you chills.
Your immediate reaction? To make them shut everything down, saying âThatâs cheating!â, ban access to AI, and long for the days when the only artificial intelligence we knew was the autocorrect on the Nokia 3310.
But let me tell you this: banning artificial intelligence today would be like trying to ban Google twenty years ago. It wouldnât work and, more importantly, it would push our kids away from us.
Adolescence is already a naturally conflict-filled stage. Why add AI to the list of things to argue about? Instead, letâs look at how to turn this âthreatâ into an opportunity for growth and connection.
Why your child loves ChatGPT (and no, itâs not just laziness)
We often think young people use AI just to âdo nothing.â In reality, for a teenager, ChatGPT is:
- A tutor thatâs always available: it doesnât judge, even if you donât understand a math function after ten tries.
- An antidote to the blank page: it helps break through the performance anxiety many teens feel when facing a difficult task.
- A space for experimentation: young people play with AI, discover new things, and test the limits of the technology itself.
The risk is not the tool, but passive use
The problem isnât that ChatGPT âknows too much,â but that âonly itâ knows. The real danger is that our children stop thinking critically. If a teenager copies and pastes without even reading (let alone understanding) what theyâre doing, theyâre missing the chance to train their most important muscle: their brain.
As parents, our role is not to act as digital sheriffs, but as mentors.
3 practical tips to guide your child (without sounding like a âboomerâ)
Ask them to show you how it works
Instead of just criticizing, sit next to your child and ask: âCan you show me how you asked ChatGPT to explain photosynthesis? Iâm curious.â
Showing interest in their world lowers their defenses and allows you to naturally keep an eye on how they use the tool.
Teach critical prompting
Explain that AI is like a somewhat naĂŻve assistant: it does what you ask, but it often makes mistakes orâworseâmakes things up. Challenge your child to spot errors in ChatGPTâs answers and to give increasingly clear and precise instructions.
This not only strengthens their critical thinking and source-checking skills, but also their ability to express themselves clearly and precisely.
Establish an âintegrity agreementâ
Itâs less about banning and more about teaching ethics. You might say: âFeel free to use AI to understand a concept or to create an outline, but the final content should have your voice, your ideas, and your style.â
Value their personal creative effort over a ready-made AI output. Trust me, the difference shows!
AI as a bridge, not a barrier
We have to accept it: artificial intelligence is here to stay.
If we, as parents, demonize it, we create a wall between us and our children. But if we learn about it together with them, we have the opportunity to become trusted guides in a world that is changing faster and faster.
Remember: your child doesnât need a parent who knows everything about technology, but one who isnât afraid to learn alongside them.
Nan Coosemans
Founder of Younite
