AI chatbots have been tremendously helpful in running our workflows for quite a while now. As a freelance copywriter working from home, and with my husband working as an IT configuration engineer, our laptops have always been fixtures of daily life.
Our three children, aged 12, 9, and 5, are used to seeing us focused on screens. They knew we both worked hard, but they didn’t really understand how, until we started using the voice assistant feature of Claude.
A few months ago, my husband started a voice chat with Claude in our living room. We were simply trying to choose an accent setting, but the moment a warm voice answered back, the kids’ faces lit up. What started as an experiment quickly turned into a fun family experience, with everyone trying to come up with questions to ask. That conversation literally ended with my son asking for tips on how to make the perfect chocolate mug cake in the microwave.
That afternoon, we had great fun, but it actually helped start something unexpected.
Of course, we still use AI for work. I use it to brainstorm ideas, organize research, and speed up editing. My husband uses it to troubleshoot technical issues and make sense of coding problems more quickly. But AI has also found its way into our everyday family life, too. After work, we keep using it for things like meal planning, researching products, organizing trips, settling random debates, and answering the endless stream of questions that my curious kids have.
Our kids are listening to us problem-solve out loud
Using the live, spoken conversation feature with AI apps is helping our children learn it well. Initially, switching to voice chat was just a matter of convenience. But over time, I realized our children were watching us think, question, verify information, and solve problems in real time. They weren’t just seeing technology in action; they were actually learning how to interact with it.
Thankfully, our kids understand the difference between work time and family time. They know not to interrupt when we are deep in concentration. But when we are using the voice assistant for collaborative tasks, they love to join in. They are fascinated by the technology, but more importantly, they are learning how to direct it.
My 9-year-old recently spent an afternoon asking Claude for strategies to become better at Scrabble. My 5-year-old is the funniest. She asks Claude things like how to convince her brothers to let her join their soccer games or how to stop them from fighting. Sometimes their questions are funny, sometimes surprisingly thoughtful, but they all create opportunities for conversation.
I initially worried about what AI might mean for children
Like many parents, I was worried about how AI use might impact my kids. The most common concern, I believe, is that it will weaken their critical thinking skills.
We’re working hard to avoid that. Instead, we have been teaching our children that AI is a tool for support, not a substitute for thinking. They can use it to brainstorm ideas, do basic research, or get unstuck when they are struggling with a task. But the final ideas, opinions, and arguments must always be their own. If they are working on a school assignment, AI can help organize their thoughts, but it cannot do the thinking for them. I am the one who scrutinizes their AI use.
We also make a point of discussing its limitations. When Claude gets something wrong or confidently presents inaccurate information, we treat it as a teaching moment. Our children are learning an important lesson early: technology can be helpful, but it should never be followed blindly.
The biggest benefit has nothing to do with technology
Like many working parents, I know the guilt of answering a child’s question with, “In a minute,” while trying to finish one more task. But because AI helps us complete certain tasks more efficiently, it has given us something incredibly valuable back: time.
Work that once took me several hours can often be completed much faster. My husband spends less time tackling technical problems. As a result, our workdays no longer stretch as aggressively into evenings and weekends.
Claude is not replacing our connection with our children. If anything, it is helping protect it. Outsourcing some of the repetitive work gives us more opportunities to focus on the things that matter most, like helping with homework, cheering for them at sporting events, playing board games, or simply being present. And that, for us, is the biggest achievement of all.
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