What Makes a Lonely Child?
A major new study has scanned the brains of nearly 10,000 children and tracked them for three years. Its findings reveal which children are most at risk of loneliness, and what can be done to prevent it.
Our inaugural collection of peer-reviewed insights designed to provide clarity in an age of overwhelm. In Issue 1, we move beyond mainstream advice to examine parental burnout, the impact of streaming in schools, and the latest evidence behind our children’s digital habits and smartphone use.
Why is your daughter so stressed? New research shows high-achieving girls often link their self-worth to their grades. Constant notifications from school apps mean they can never truly switch off. Learn how to help her value herself beyond the screen and give her permission to be human.
It can feel like wasting money on 'fake' items. But for your child, digital assets and skins are a ticket to social belonging. We explain the science behind the screen and how to handle the requests.
Modern parenting pressure to stay 'perfectly calm' can lead to a measurable state of burnout. We examine the latest research explaining why hiding your feelings backfires, and how 'sturdy leadership' offers a clearer path to well-being.
75% of parents want school phone bans, yet teens still scroll for over an hour during class. Why? The answer is uncomfortable: they are mirroring us. We explore the new data on why reclaiming their focus starts with us putting our own phones down.
New research reveals the hidden cost of school streaming: an "emotional legacy" that can shape a child's self-belief for years. We unpack why "fluid" groups often become fixed labels and provide the essential, evidence-backed questions you need to ask to keep your child’s potential open.
"I'm bored!" Don't panic. New research reveals boredom isn't a problem to fix - it's essential for your child's brain. Discover why resisting the urge to entertain is the key to building their creativity and resilience.
Strict digital rules protect young children, but research shows that for older teenagers, they often backfire. Shifting from a role where you control access to one where you offer advice builds the internal skills children need to navigate the internet safely when you are not there.
Does your child try to "train" their apps, content and social media feeds. Understand why they do it and help your child turn digital myths into media literacy.