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By Elena Czarnowski, Founder of Kid Laboratories
Screens are everywhere. They’re how our kids learn, play, connect, and let’s admit it, how we sometimes get a moment to breathe. But if you’ve ever said, “Turn off the iPad!” only to check your own phone five minutes later. You’re not alone.
As a mom of three and an educator, I’ve lived through the tug-of-war between wanting to limit screen time and recognizing how powerful technology can be when used with purpose. The truth is, technology itself isn’t the problem. It’s how we use it that matters.
So instead of fighting tech, what if we taught our kids to lead it?
The Reframe: From Enemy to Ally
For years, “screen time” has been painted as the villain. But here’s what I’ve learned after working with hundreds of families: when we shift the focus from time to value, everything changes.
Instead of asking, “How many hours were you on the computer today?” try asking, “What did you create today?”
That tiny change turns technology from a passive distraction into an active learning tool and your child starts seeing it that way, too.
Skill Time in Action
At Kid Laboratories, we call this Skill Time. It’s when screen time is used with purpose to explore, build, and grow. Here are a few easy ways to turn your child’s tech habits into learning moments:
1. Swap YouTube for “How-To-Tube.”
If your child loves watching videos, guide them toward creators who teach something cool like how to build a robot, design a game, or make digital art. One of my sons learned how to code his own mini video game this way.
2. Turn gaming into goal-setting.
Games like Minecraft and Roblox can teach problem-solving and teamwork but only if we frame them right. Before your child starts playing, ask what they want to build or learn this time. Then celebrate what they accomplish and “punish” not just how long they played.
3. Let AI spark curiosity, not fear.
AI tools can be incredible for kids when used safely. Let them ask ChatGPT (with guidance!) how volcanoes work, or have it help them brainstorm ideas for a story. Instead of fearing AI, teach them to question it. That’s critical thinking in action.
4. Make money, talk fun.
Our Moneywi$e program shows that even simple budgeting apps can become games like tracking imaginary investments or setting a savings goal for a big dream purchase. It’s hands-on, and it builds confidence that lasts a lifetime.
The Real Secret: Your Example
Here’s the hard truth I’ve had to learn myself: our kids don’t just copy what we say, they copy what we model.
If I want my sons to see technology as a tool, I have to show them how I use it that way too, by creating, researching, learning, and yes, sometimes just relaxing. Balance doesn’t mean perfection. It means intentionality.
From Screen Time Guilt to Skill Time Growth
So maybe the goal isn’t to eliminate screen time. Maybe it’s to elevate it.
Instead of counting minutes, let’s count moments of curiosity. Instead of guilt, let’s cultivate growth.
Because the truth is, we’re not raising kids who can avoid technology. We’re raising kids who can lead it. And that starts right where we are with a little intention, a lot of grace, and the belief that our kids are capable of more than we imagine.
Elena Czarnowski is the founder of Kid Laboratories, a digital learning platform helping families raise confident, future-ready kids through courses in AI, financial literacy, and character development. Learn more at www.kidlaboratories.com.





