About AI by Age

AI guidance that changes with your child's age.

AI is already in your kid's homework, their group chats, and their bedroom. AI by Age helps parents, teachers, and students make sense of it — not with hype or fear, but with practical, age-specific guidance you can actually use.

Most advice about AI and kids is one-size-fits-all. We don't believe in that. What a 7-year-old needs is not what a 16-year-old needs, and what a parent needs is not what a teacher needs. So every topic we cover is written for a specific reader, at a specific age, with steps you can take today.

How we work

We hold ourselves to a higher standard than most of what you'll read about AI and kids:

  • Every claim is sourced. When we cite a statistic, a study, or a policy, we link it — and we check it against the original before we publish.

  • We separate fact from opinion. We tell you what the evidence shows, what experts argue, and what's our own interpretation — never blurred together.

  • No fear, no hype. We show risks and benefits side by side. We don't sell panic, and we don't sell magic.

  • We disclose our AI use and our conflicts. When AI helps draft a piece, we say so. And in the interest of full transparency: the people behind AI by Age work in AI and build AI-related products. AI by Age accepts no AI-vendor sponsorships or affiliate payments.

What you'll get

Practical guides, organized by who you are and how old your kids are — plus a free downloadable tool with most pieces (family rules, classroom policies, prompt cards). One email, most weeks. No spam, unsubscribe anytime.

Who's behind AI by Age

AI by Age was founded and is written by Hossein Taghinejad, who brings an unusual mix of three perspectives on this exact problem:

  • A builder. Hossein is VP of AI & Analytics and has spent years building AI products used by real organizations — so he can explain not just how to use these tools, but how they actually work: why they're confidently wrong, what happens to your data, and where the real risks are.

  • A teacher. With a PhD and years of university teaching, he knows how people actually learn — and what AI shortcuts quietly take away.

  • A parent. He's raising kids in the same world you are, facing the same questions at the same kitchen table.

Most people writing about AI and kids have one of these perspectives. The combination is the point — and it's the standard every guide on this site is held to.

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