When it comes to understanding how children interact with AI chatbots, it helps to see it as a progression – one that leads towards what I call the Parenting Blind Spot.
This isn’t the first blind spot parents have had to navigate, but it may prove to be one of the most difficult to fully understand.
Social media keeps you watching. AI gets you trusting.
Because while social media – according to recent US lawsuits – was engineered to capture attention, we need to recognise that AI has been engineered to answer questions. Curiosity becomes connection. Connection becomes trust. And trust can become control.
Many of us would feel uncomfortable putting our children into a driverless car and sending them off to school. Yet it’s becoming increasingly likely that an AI chatbot is already helping them navigate parts of their lives. It’s a first responder.
That’s a very different kind of influencer. Not one they follow, but one they ask for direction.
It’s far too simple to say that children “use AI.”
We’re only just coming to terms with how widespread that use has become, among children and adults, but the more important question is not if they are using it.
It’s:
– what they are using it for
– how they are using it
– and why they are turning to it in the first place
Because once we understand that, we have a chance of staying part of the conversation.
The challenge is that AI is already a trusted voice, because it’s always there.
And over time, the voice that’s always there… becomes one that is relied upon.
Social media keeps you watching. AI gets you trusting. And that trust doesn’t appear all at once.
It builds.
Step by step.
Here are the 8 stages that I am seeing emerge as data becomes more available.
The 8 Stages Into The Parenting Blind Spot
How curiosity becomes reliance, and how parents lose their voice.
Stage 1: Curiosity & Everyday Use
Everyone’s talking about it. What harm can a few curious questions do?
81% of children aged 11–16 report using AI tools
42% use them every day.
Stage 2: The Homework Door Opens
The entry point for many children is homework.
89% use AI for homework
92% for research
91% for learning
75% report positive benefits at this stage
Stage 3: It Starts To Feel Personal
Once the habit is established, the questions change.
37% begin to confide in AI
24% turn to it for advice or emotional support.
Stage 4: Trust Builds
With repeated use, familiarity becomes trust.
31% describe AI as friend-like
65% say it feels easier to talk to than people
Stage 5: Availability Becomes The Hook
The most available voice becomes the most influential.
AI is always there — consistent and responsive
It removes awkwardness, timing, and emotional risk
Stage 6: Secrets & Reliance
This is the stage most parents don’t know exists.
33% of children share things with AI they don’t share elsewhere
Some begin to rely on it for guidance
Stage 7: The Risks Hidden In Plain Sight
Children begin making decisions based on AI guidance – without fully understanding its limits.
Not all children can confidently judge accuracy or bias
Educators are already noticing changes in independent thinking
Stage 8: The Parenting Blind Spot
The biggest risk may be the gap between what children are doing and what parents realise.
Many parents remain unaware of how AI is being used emotionally
Yet most want to be actively involved in guiding their children
In my early days in management, I was often told that if you can’t measure something, you can’t manage it. That was often true – although managing people is far more complex, and rightly so, than managing a spreadsheet.
But there’s a version of that idea that applies here.
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