Lesson 940 of 1550
AI Summer Camp Comparisons: Beyond the Marketing Page
AI can compile summer camp comparisons across cost, ratio, screen-time policy, and meal program — making the choice your kid will actually live in legible.
Lesson map
What this lesson covers
Learning path
The main moves in order
- 1The premise
- 2camp comparison
- 3staff ratio
- 4screen-time policy
Concept cluster
Terms to connect while reading
Section 1
The premise
AI can compile camp comparisons across structured criteria and surface what marketing pages hide, but the family-fit call is yours alone.
What AI does well here
- Compile cost, ratio, hours, and meal-policy comparisons across camps.
- Pull and quote camp-policy language on screens, phones, and discipline.
What AI cannot do
- Predict whether a particular kid will thrive at a particular camp.
- Substitute for actually visiting the camp and meeting staff.
Key terms in this lesson
End-of-lesson quiz
Check what stuck
15 questions · Score saves to your progress.
Tutor
Curious about “AI Summer Camp Comparisons: Beyond the Marketing Page”?
Ask anything about this lesson. I’ll answer using just what you’re reading — short, friendly, grounded.
Progress saved locally in this browser. Sign in to sync across devices.
Related lessons
Keep going
Adults & Professionals · 40 min
Screen Time vs. AI Time: Why the Categories Are Already Outdated
Screen-time guidelines from 2018 don't account for kids using AI as a homework partner or creative collaborator. Parents need a new framework — one that distinguishes consumption from interaction, passive from generative.
Adults & Professionals · 9 min
Homework Help With AI: House Rules That Build Skills Instead of Replacing Them
AI can do your kid's homework — but it can also explain a concept three different ways until it clicks. The difference is in the house rules. Here's a framework parents can adopt this week.
Adults & Professionals · 12 min
AI Companion Apps: What Parents Need to Know About Replika, Character.AI, and the Rest
AI companion apps have exploded in popularity with teens. Some are benign, some have genuinely harmed kids. Parents need to know how the apps work, what the risks are, and how to talk about them at home.
