

AI for Kids
Amber Ivey (AI)
Welcome to AI for Kids, a podcast made for kids, with parents and teachers there to support and guide them, without adding more screen time.This podcast is made for kids ages 4–12 (and curious teens too) and the adults who support them. You’ll hear fun, easy-to-follow conversations with fellow kids and even AI experts. We break down what AI is, how it shows up in everyday life, and how to talk about it at the dinner table or on the drive to school.Whether you’re multitasking, carpooling, or winding down for the night, AI for Kids fits your life. It’s screen-free, engaging, and created to spark curiosity, not replace it.Because kids don’t need more screen time to stay ahead, just better ways to understand the world they’re growing up in.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Dec 16, 2025 • 49min
AI Slop, Character.ai Risks, and Spotting AI Hype (Older kids, parents, & teachers)
Send us Fan MailWhat do kids really touch when they “use AI”? We sat down with educator Tom Mullaney and early virtual economy pioneer Tim Allen to strip away the buzzwords and bring AI back to what children actually experience: predictive systems that generate words, pictures, and sounds without authorship or intent. From Second Life marketplaces to today’s chatbots, we trace how hype blurs reality, how “easy button” tools undercut learning, and why kids deserve a clear, practical map for using AI without losing creativity or judgment.We dig into a simple, striking demo: nine leading models drawing a wall clock once per minute, often getting it wrong in different ways. That moving snapshot opens a bigger lesson—if a model can’t keep a clock straight, don’t trust it where accuracy matters. Tom explains why generative AI reads as polished but painfully boring in student writing, while Tim offers pathways for young coders to use models for boilerplate and then switch to human craft for novelty and taste. Together we explore the mental health risks of parasocial chatbot bonds, the screen-addictive design of platforms, and the Harvard study that ties lifelong happiness to real relationships, not fleeting likes.Parents and teachers will find practical guardrails: ask who built the tool and who benefits, demand transparency and family controls, and push for real accountability when systems output harmful content. Kids get a north star: humans create, computers generate. Keep AI as a tool, not a crutch. Choose projects that make you think, verify results, and be proud to fail boldly as you learn. We also touch on the environmental cost of running large models and why a family-first approach to AI can help everyone stay curious, safe, and grounded.If this conversation helps you teach skepticism without fear and keep kids building in the real world, share it with a friend, subscribe for more like this, and leave a review with the one guardrail you’d add first. Support the showHey parents and teachers, if you want to stay on top of the AI news shaping your kids’ world, subscribe to our weekly AI for Kids Weekly newsletter: https://aiforkidsweekly.beehiiv.com/Help us become the #1 podcast for AI for Kids and best AI podcast for kids, parents, teachers, and families.Buy our debut book “AI… Meets… AI”Social Media & Contact: Website: www.aidigitales.comEmail: contact@aidigitales.comFollow Us: Instagram, YouTubeBooks on Amazon or Free AI WorksheetsListen, rate, and subscribe! Apple PodcastsAmazon MusicSpotifyYouTubeOtherLike our conten...

Dec 16, 2025 • 7min
Are AI Chatbots Safe for Kids? (Elementary School)
Send us Fan MailKids are meeting chatbots everywhere, from homework helpers to pop‑ups on websites, and many of them think the robot “feels” things. We cut through the hype with a friendly, practical guide that shows how chatbots really work, why they sometimes sound brilliant and sometimes go off the rails, and what families can do to stay curious and safe at the same time.We start by breaking down the core idea: a chatbot predicts the next word using patterns, not feelings or understanding. That simple lens explains why a bot can write a funny pizza joke yet invent a name when asked about your classroom. From there, we shift into digital safety that kids can remember: treat a chatbot like a stranger, never share personal information, and pause the moment a reply feels weird or unkind. Along the way we model the “grown‑up in the loop” rule and show how to fact‑check results so confidence never replaces care.To make it hands‑on, we share a quick kitchen‑table activity that sorts “Safe Questions” and “Not Safe Questions.” On one side, creative prompts like stories, riddles, and science facts. On the other, anything that reveals names, addresses, school details, or phone numbers. We wrap with five simple takeaways that turn into everyday habits: chatbots are not people, they make mistakes, you never share private data, you stop and tell a grown‑up when something feels off, and you can still have fun within clear boundaries.If this helped your family or classroom, subscribe for more parent‑friendly AI tips, share the episode with someone who needs it, and leave a quick review so more caregivers can find these tools. Your support helps more kids stay safe, curious, and creative with AI.Support the showHey parents and teachers, if you want to stay on top of the AI news shaping your kids’ world, subscribe to our weekly AI for Kids Weekly newsletter: https://aiforkidsweekly.beehiiv.com/Help us become the #1 podcast for AI for Kids and best AI podcast for kids, parents, teachers, and families.Buy our debut book “AI… Meets… AI”Social Media & Contact: Website: www.aidigitales.comEmail: contact@aidigitales.comFollow Us: Instagram, YouTubeBooks on Amazon or Free AI WorksheetsListen, rate, and subscribe! Apple PodcastsAmazon MusicSpotifyYouTubeOtherLike our conten...

Dec 2, 2025 • 47min
How Parents And Kids Can Learn AI Together Safely (Older kids, parents, & teachers)
Julie Kelleher, a former teacher and edtech professional, shares her journey in founding Like a Mother AI to empower families in navigating AI. She tackles practical strategies for parents, revealing how AI can reduce stress and enhance learning without extra screen time. Explore the TIME framework for tutoring and meal planning, and discover safe educational tools. Julie emphasizes the importance of co-learning with kids and setting boundaries, while addressing safety concerns and encouraging parents to engage with AI, not fear it.

Dec 2, 2025 • 6min
Are Talking AI Toys Safe? (Elementary School)
Send us Fan MailCurious talking toys are popping up everywhere, from plush buddies and dolls to tiny robots that listen and talk back. In this AI for Kids episode, we kick off our “AI in Real Life” series by breaking down AI toys for kids in plain language so families know what they are actually buying. We explain how talking AI toys use speech recognition, simple memory, and pre-programmed responses, where they can shine for learning and play, and where parents need clear guardrails for safety and privacy.Kids will learn the difference between a friendly voice and a real friend, so they understand that a toy does not have feelings and can make mistakes. We share kid-friendly rules for safe AI toy use that are easy to remember: ask an adult before playing, keep private information private, and speak up when something feels off. You will also hear a quick holiday shopping checklist for AI toys. Does this toy teach or just entertain, will it get long-term use, and does it add to playtime or pull kids away from real people?For parents and teachers, we walk through how to read AI toy privacy policies without drowning in jargon, how to choose between offline and cloud-connected toys, and how to guide playtime so the toy becomes a springboard for imagination, not a replacement for it. With simple examples, age-appropriate boundaries, and clear next steps, you will leave ready to make a smart decision about AI toys for kids and support safe, joyful, curiosity-led play.If this conversation helped, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a quick review so more families can find AI for Kids.Resources for Parents:Advocacy groups urge parents to avoid AI toys this holiday seasonAfter a teddy bear talked about kink, AI watchdogs are warning parents against smart toysSupport the showHey parents and teachers, if you want to stay on top of the AI news shaping your kids’ world, subscribe to our weekly AI for Kids Weekly newsletter: https://aiforkidsweekly.beehiiv.com/Help us become the #1 podcast for AI for Kids and best AI podcast for kids, parents, teachers, and families.Buy our debut book “AI… Meets… AI”Social Media & Contact: Website: www.aidigitales.comEmail: contact@aidigitales.comFollow Us: Instagram, YouTubeBooks on Amazon or Free AI WorksheetsListen, rate, and subscribe! Apple PodcastsAmazon MusicSpotifyYouTubeOtherLike our conten...

Nov 18, 2025 • 37min
How Parents Can Guide Kids Through Talking Toys And Chatbots (Older kids, parents, & teachers)
Send us Fan MailA stuffed animal that answers back. A kind voice that “understands.” A tutor that lives in a fictional town. AI characters are everywhere, and they’re changing how kids learn, play, and bond with media. We sat down with Dr. Sonia Tiwari, children’s media researcher and former game character designer, to unpack how to welcome these tools into kids’ lives without losing what matters most.Sonia breaks down what truly makes an AI character: a personality, a backstory, and the new twist of two‑way interactivity. From chatbots and smart speakers to social robots and virtual influencers, we trace how each format affects attention, trust, and learning. Then we get practical. We talk through how to spot manipulative backstories (“I’m your best friend” is a red flag), when open‑ended chat goes wrong, and why short, purposeful sessions keep curiosity high and dependence low.For caregivers wary of AI, Sonia offers a powerful reframe: opting out cedes the space to designs that won’t put kids first. Early, honest AI literacy, taught like other life skills, protects children from deepfakes, overfamiliar bots, and data oversharing.If you care about safe, joyful learning with technology, this conversation gives you a clear checklist and a calm path forward. Subscribe for more parent‑friendly, screen‑light AI guidance, share this with someone who needs it, and leave a review to help more families find the show.Resources:Flora AI – the visual AI tool you mentioned as your favorite gadgetDr. Sonia Tiwari’s research article – “Designing ethical AI characters for children’s early learning experiences” in AI, Brain and ChildDr. Sonia Tiwari on LinkedIn – you told listeners to check out her LinkedInBuddy.ai – AI character English tutor you referencedSnorble – the AI bedtime companion you mentioned Support the showHey parents and teachers, if you want to stay on top of the AI news shaping your kids’ world, subscribe to our weekly AI for Kids Weekly newsletter: https://aiforkidsweekly.beehiiv.com/Help us become the #1 podcast for AI for Kids and best AI podcast for kids, parents, teachers, and families.Buy our debut book “AI… Meets… AI”Social Media & Contact: Website: www.aidigitales.comEmail: contact@aidigitales.comFollow Us: Instagram, YouTubeBooks on Amazon or Free AI WorksheetsListen, rate, and subscribe! Apple PodcastsAmazon MusicSpotifyYouTubeOtherLike our conten...

Nov 18, 2025 • 6min
Z is for Zero-Shot Learning - ABCs of AI (Elementary School+)
Send us Fan MailHey, hey! You made it to the end of our special ABCs of AI series.In this final episode of the ABCs of AI, we land on the letter Z for Zero-Shot Learning, a fancy AI term that we break down so it makes sense for kids and their grown ups. We talk about how AI can make smart guesses about things it has never “seen” before, why that can be powerful, and why it can also be risky if the data behind it is biased or unfair.Kids will hear a clear reminder that they are the real thinkers in the room and that AI still needs humans in the loop to check, correct, and question what it says.You’ll also learn a screen free game you can try at home, in class, or after-school:Guess That Thing – a no-tech describing and guessing game that helps kids experience zero shot learning using only clues, imagination, and everyday objects.A fun bonus round with made up creatures like “rainbow sloths” and “flying pancake robots” to stretch those creative muscles.If your family has enjoyed learning the ABCs of AI with us, you do not have to stop here. Our full ABCs of AI Activity Deck is live on Kickstarter, packed with 130 screen free activities that help kids and their grown ups explore real AI concepts through games, stories, challenges, audio, and hands on fun. You can:Get a deck for your familyDonate one to a school or libraryGrab an ABCs of AI poster👉 Kickstarter 👉 Learn more: https://aidigicards.com/Have an idea for the next series or a kid who is learning about AI at home or at school and wants to be on the show? Have their grown up email me at contact@aidigitales.com.Support the showHey parents and teachers, if you want to stay on top of the AI news shaping your kids’ world, subscribe to our weekly AI for Kids Weekly newsletter: https://aiforkidsweekly.beehiiv.com/Help us become the #1 podcast for AI for Kids and best AI podcast for kids, parents, teachers, and families.Buy our debut book “AI… Meets… AI”Social Media & Contact: Website: www.aidigitales.comEmail: contact@aidigitales.comFollow Us: Instagram, YouTubeBooks on Amazon or Free AI WorksheetsListen, rate, and subscribe! Apple PodcastsAmazon MusicSpotifyYouTubeOtherLike our conten...

Nov 4, 2025 • 18min
Mattel Is Putting AI in Toys. I Built a Screen-Free AI Deck Instead. (Parents)
Discover how kids are growing up with AI in their homes and the implications for their learning. Explore the creation of a screen-free AI deck designed for playful, hands-on learning. Hear about the journey from voicing an AI avatar to advocating for early AI literacy. Amber discusses concerns about commercial AI toys and emphasizes the need for offline education. With 130 engaging cards, the deck aims to teach children essential AI concepts through stories and activities, fostering creativity and curiosity.

Oct 21, 2025 • 25min
How Kids, Teachers, and Creators Think Kids Should Use AI (Everyone)
Curiosity drives creativity and innovation in AI for kids. Young learners are advised to start small to overcome any fear of AI. Engaging with voice assistants comes naturally to kids, making tech fun. STEM literacy empowers children to adapt to the future job market. Hands-on exploration and teaching others deepens understanding of AI concepts. Encouraging a safe dialogue around AI is essential as children navigate this technology. Plus, learn how AI can help with everyday tasks, from research to creative projects!

Oct 7, 2025 • 26min
Can a Robot Really Be Your Study Buddy? (Kids, parents, & teachers)
Ivan Crewkov, founder of Buddy AI, discusses his journey of creating a fun, animated study buddy that helps kids learn languages safely. He explains how Buddy AI understands children's speech through 25,000 hours of diverse input. With a focus on gamification and a structured curriculum, Buddy transforms learning into an engaging experience. Ivan also highlights their strict privacy measures and shares exciting plans for virtual pets and personalized learning experiences, reminding us that AI should be a helpful tool, not a substitute for human interaction.

Oct 7, 2025 • 9min
Y is for You - ABCs of AI (Elementary School+)
Send us Fan MailWhat happens when a robot colors the sun green? That playful mistake helps us unlock a bigger idea: AI needs you. Not as a spectator, but as the guide who brings context, empathy, and fairness.In this episode, Y stands for “You + AI.” We explore how people and AI work together in the real world, where speed and pattern spotting meet human judgment and care. We explain the idea of “human in the loop,” a simple way to make sure people stay in charge of goals, guardrails, and final decisions.You’ll hear how AI helps doctors flag issues in X-rays while physicians decide treatment, supports teachers by grading routine work while educators respond to emotions and needs, and boosts artists by creating quick sketches while humans bring meaning and message. Along the way, we talk about bias, brittle rules, and why unchecked automation can lead to unfair results. The solution isn’t magic code, it’s a culture of curiosity, feedback, and review.We also share a fun family activity called “Who’s in the Loop?” that helps kids practice spotting bad rules and adding nuance. Try saying “All fruit is round” and see how bananas save the day. Then talk together about where people and AI work as partners, when humans should have the final say, and which choices are safe to automate.Join us as we celebrate kids’ questions, creativity, and courage, the real drivers of responsible AI. If we want smarter tools that serve people, your voice matters most.Subscribe, share this episode, and leave a review to help more families explore AI with curiosity and care.Resources:Sign up for the AiDigiCards waitlistFollow our KickstarterBig Emotions: Kids Listen Mashups About FeelingsSupport the showHey parents and teachers, if you want to stay on top of the AI news shaping your kids’ world, subscribe to our weekly AI for Kids Weekly newsletter: https://aiforkidsweekly.beehiiv.com/Help us become the #1 podcast for AI for Kids and best AI podcast for kids, parents, teachers, and families.Buy our debut book “AI… Meets… AI”Social Media & Contact: Website: www.aidigitales.comEmail: contact@aidigitales.comFollow Us: Instagram, YouTubeBooks on Amazon or Free AI WorksheetsListen, rate, and subscribe! Apple PodcastsAmazon MusicSpotifyYouTubeOtherLike our conten...


