For Parents & Educators

Resources to Help Your Child Thrive in the Future

Explore our collection of articles, guides, and insights on teaching children problem-solving, initiative, and value creation — whether or not they join our program.

Articles & Guides

Practical insights for raising problem-solvers and creators

🤖
Future of Work

Preparing Kids for Jobs That Don't Exist Yet

AI will transform 85% of jobs by 2030. How do we prepare children for a future we can't predict? The answer lies in teaching adaptable skills, not specific knowledge.

Read more →
🧠
Mindset & Philosophy

The "Life Operating System" Every Child Needs

Identify problems → Take initiative → Learn from feedback → Create value. This cycle isn't just for entrepreneurs — it's a framework for thriving in any field.

Read more →
💪
Mindset & Philosophy

Why Failure is Essential for Learning

We're taught to avoid failure, but research shows it's essential for deep learning. How to create safe spaces where children can fail, reflect, and grow stronger.

Read more →
🏠
Activities at Home

5 Problem-Solving Activities for Ages 8-12

Simple activities you can do at home to help your child develop problem-spotting skills and creative thinking — no special materials required.

Read more →
💬
Activities at Home

Questions That Build a Creator Mindset

The questions we ask shape how children think. Replace "What did you learn today?" with questions that encourage observation, initiative, and reflection.

Read more →
📊
Future of Work

Skills AI Can't Replace

AI excels at pattern recognition and routine tasks. But there are uniquely human capabilities that will become more valuable, not less, as AI advances.

Read more →
🔄
Mindset & Philosophy

From "I Can't" to "I'll Try": Building Initiative

Initiative isn't innate — it's developed through practice and encouragement. How to help children move from waiting for instructions to taking action.

Read more →
🎯
Activities at Home

The "Mini Project" Method for Kids

How to structure small, achievable projects that give children real experience with the full cycle of creation — from idea to execution to reflection.

Read more →

Quick Tips for Parents

Simple ways to foster entrepreneurial thinking at home

01

Ask "What Problem Does This Solve?"

When you see new products or services, ask your child what problem they think it solves. This builds problem-awareness.

02

Praise Effort, Not Just Results

Celebrate when your child tries something new, regardless of the outcome. "I love that you tried that" is more powerful than "Good job."

03

Let Them Struggle (a Little)

Resist the urge to immediately solve problems for your child. Give them space to work through challenges with your support.

04

Make Failure a Conversation

When things don't work out, ask: "What did you learn? What would you try differently?" Normalize failure as part of learning.

05

Share Your Own Learning Journey

Tell your child about times you failed, learned, and adapted. Show them that adults are learners too.

06

Encourage "What If" Questions

When your child asks "what if" questions, engage with them seriously. These questions are the seeds of innovation.