Stop Fighting About Screen Time...

And Start Teaching Your Child Digital Responsibility

The Complete System to Raise Self-Regulating, Safe, and Balanced Kids in a Screen-Obsessed World (Without Banning Devices or Losing Your Mind)

Get full access now for $10!

Normally $37. Buy Now for $10

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You're Terrified of Giving Your Kids Screen Time...

But You Know You Can't Ban It Forever

Every parent I meet falls into one of two camps:

Camp 1:

You're so scared of screens that you've banned them completely.

But you know it's not realistic.

Everything is online now. School. Friends. Life. And your kids resent you for it.

Camp 2:

You gave in to screens, and now you regret it.

Kids are glued to devices.

They sneak extra time. They throw tantrums when you take the iPad away. You feel like you've lost control.

Both camps have the same fear:

"What if screens ruin my child?"

And here's what nobody tells you:

The problem isn't screens. The problem is that nobody taught your child (or you) how to use them responsibly.

The Real Problem With Screen Time

It's not the screens themselves.

It's that:

  • Kids don't know how to self-regulate (because we never taught them)
  • Kids don't have better alternatives (so they default to screens)
  • Parents don't know how to keep kids safe online (so they either ban it or ignore it)
  • There's no framework for responsibility (just arbitrary time limits that don't work)
  • Kids don't understand that screen time is a privilege with responsibilities (they think it's a right)

So what happens?

01

If You Ban Screens:

  • Your kids feel left out and resentful
  • They'll binge when they finally get access (at a friend's house, in college)
  • They never learn self-regulation (a lifelong skill)
  • You're constantly the "bad guy"
  • It's not sustainable (school is online, work is online, life is online)

02

If You Give Unlimited Access:

  • Kids become addicted to the dopamine hits
  • They lose interest in physical play, hobbies, family time
  • Their behavior gets worse (screen-related emotional disturbances are REAL)
  • They're exposed to dangers online you don't even know about
  • You lose your authority and their respect

03

If You Just Set "Time Limits":

  • Kids negotiate and manipulate constantly
  • You're nagging about timers and fighting when time is up
  • They sneak extra screen time
  • They haven't learned WHY it matters
  • The battles never end

There's a fourth option you haven't tried:

Teaching Screen Time as a RESPONSIBILITY

Not a ban. Not unlimited access. Not arbitrary time limits.

A framework where your child learns to self-regulate, make safe choices, and understand that screens are a tool with responsibilities.

Just like you teach them to:

  • Cross the street safely (not ban streets or let them run wild)
  • Use a knife to cut food (not ban knives or let them play with them)
  • Manage money (not ban it or give unlimited access)

Screen time is a modern life skill. And like all life skills, it must be TAUGHT.

This is what the Screen Time Responsibilities Playbook does.

Imagine This Instead...

Your 9-year-old asks for screen time:

Instead of you deciding (and the inevitable negotiation), they check their "Can I Get Screen Time?" self-check-in chart.

Have I finished my homework? ✓
Have I done my chores? ✓
Have I spent time with family today? ✓
Have I been outside/physically active? ✓

"Yes, I can have screen time now."

They KNOW the answer. They made the responsible choice. You didn't have to nag or enforce. They self-regulated.

Your 11-year-old wants to message friends on WhatsApp:

Before they do, they look at the WhatsApp Safety Rules poster on the wall:

  • Don't share personal information
  • Don't open suspicious links
  • Tell a parent if something makes me uncomfortable
  • Don't talk to strangers

They've internalized these rules. They're making safe choices. Without you hovering over them.

Your 7-year-old has been on the iPad for 30 minutes:

They check the Recognizing Screen-Related Emotions chart:

  • Do I feel tired?
  • Are my eyes hurting?
  • Am I getting grumpy?
  • Do I feel disconnected from my family?

"Oh, I'm getting grumpy. I should take a break and do something else."

They recognized their own screen fatigue. They made a healthy choice. You didn't have to be the bad guy.

Your 12-year-old is bored:

Instead of defaulting to YouTube, they grab the "60 Things I Can Do Instead of Screens" list:

  • Build a fort
  • Learn origami
  • Write a story
  • Bake something
  • Call a friend (voice, not text)
  • Go outside
  • Work on a craft project

They have OPTIONS. They choose a real-world activity. Because you made it just as appealing and easy as screens.

You're worried about your child's online behavior:

You sit down together with the Screen Time Contract.

Together, you:

  • Define clear expectations
  • Set responsibilities (not just time limits)
  • Agree on consequences
  • Establish trust

Your child SIGNS it. They committed. They understand this is a responsibility they're earning, not a right they're entitled to.

Your relationship shifts from enforcer vs. rebel to mentor and growing child.

Your teen wants social media:

You don't just say "no" out of fear.

You use the Social Media Safety Rules and Be SMART Online Poster to TEACH them:

  • What to watch for
  • How to protect themselves
  • What healthy social media use looks like
  • When to ask for help

You give them the My Safety Network chart to identify trusted adults they can talk to.

You're training them for the real world, not shielding them from it.

This is parenting for the modern world.

Not fear-based banning. Not helpless permissiveness.

Intentional training in digital responsibility.

And it's what your child needs to thrive in the 21st century.

Introducing: The Screen Time Responsibilities Playbook

The complete system to help your child become self-regulating, safe, and responsible with screens - so you can stop being the screen time police.

This isn't about time limits. It's about training a life skill.

Your child will learn:

  • How to self-assess if they're ready for screen time
  • How to recognize when they've had enough
  • How to stay safe online (without you hovering)
  • How to balance screens with real-world activities
  • How to make responsible digital choices
  • That screen time is a privilege that comes with responsibilities

And you'll learn:

  • How to trust your child with screens (without the anxiety)
  • How to keep them safe without banning everything
  • How to build a positive relationship around technology
  • How to prevent screen addiction before it starts
  • How to handle modern parenting challenges with confidence

21 tools + an email course to answer your deepest concerns.

Here's Everything You Get:

1. SAFETY FOUNDATION (For Parents)

Online Safety for Kids - Things to Do Before You Give Your Child Screen Time (Checklist)

The essential steps you MUST take before handing over any device. This is your safety foundation - the non-negotiables that protect your child before they even log on.

Online Safety for Kids - Dos and Don'ts (Parents Copy)

Your handbook on what to teach kids about screen safety. Not vague advice - specific dos and don'ts you can teach clearly. This becomes your reference guide for every conversation.

Age-Appropriate Screen Time Limits and Behavior Recommendations

Finally! Clear guidance on:

  • How much screen time is appropriate at each age
  • What behavior to expect at each developmental stage
  • What activities they should be doing instead
  • When to worry vs. when it's normal

No more guessing if you're being too strict or too lenient.

2. RESPONSIBILITY FRAMEWORK (For Kids)

These are the self-check-in tools that teach your child to self-regulate. They're not you controlling them - they're them controlling themselves.

Can I Get Screen Time? (Self Check-In for Kids)

Before asking you, they check themselves:

  • Have I completed my responsibilities?
  • Have I done physical activity today?
  • Is this a good time for screens?

Visual poster they can reference independently. No more negotiating.

Screen Time Routine Planner

Helps your child build a balanced daily routine that includes:

  • School/homework time
  • Family time
  • Faith/prayer time
  • Physical activity
  • Creative time
  • Screen time (in proper balance)

They see how screens fit into a full, rich life - not replace it.

Recognizing Screen-Related Emotions (Self Check-In for Kids)

This is the game-changer for preventing addiction.

Your child learns to recognize:

  • Screen fatigue
  • Eye strain
  • Irritability from too much screen time
  • Emotional disconnection
  • When to take a break

They become aware of how screens affect them. Awareness = self-regulation.

3. ONLINE SAFETY RULES (Self Check-In Posters for Kids)

These aren't lectures. These are visual reminders your child can reference before making online choices.

'Be SMART Online' Poster

The acronym that helps kids remember safety rules at a glance.

Online Safety Rules Poster

Core rules displayed clearly. On the wall, always visible, always reminding.

WhatsApp Safety Rules (Self Check-In for Kids)

Specific to messaging:

  • What's safe to share
  • What to avoid
  • When to ask a parent
  • How to recognize danger

Social Media Safety Rules (Self Check-In for Kids)

For when they're ready for social platforms:

  • Privacy settings
  • Stranger danger
  • Oversharing risks
  • Cyberbullying recognition

How to Decide If Something Is Safe To Do Online (Self Check-In for Kids)

The decision-making framework:

  • If I'm not sure, I ask
  • If it feels wrong, it probably is
  • If I wouldn't want my parents to see it, I don't do it

This teaches JUDGMENT, not just obedience.

List of Things Allowed to Do Online (Self Check-In for Kids)

Clear boundaries on approved activities. No gray area. They know what's allowed.

My Safety Network (People I Talk to Online - Self Check-In)

Teaches kids:

  • Who is safe to talk to
  • Who are trusted adults they can reach out to
  • How to identify unsafe interactions
  • When to get help

4. ISLAMIC VALUES INTEGRATION

Islamic Values of a Muslim - Things to Remember Online (Self Check-In for Kids)

Connects Islamic character and adab to online behavior:

  • Am I being honest?
  • Am I being respectful?
  • Am I wasting time Allah gave me?
  • Would I be proud of this in front of Allah?
  • Am I guarding my gaze and heart?

Screen time becomes part of their spiritual development, not separate from it.

5. CONTRACTS & AGREEMENTS

Screen Time Contracts

Build clear agreements between you and your child:

  • Responsibilities they must fulfill
  • Time limits they agree to
  • Consequences if agreements are broken
  • Trust you're building together

They sign it. It's official. It's respectful. It's not you dictating - it's you partnering.

Media Contracts

Specifically for video content, streaming, YouTube:

  • What types of content are appropriate
  • How to handle inappropriate content
  • Reporting responsibilities
  • Time and place boundaries

6. SCREEN-FREE ALTERNATIVES

This is the piece most parents miss: You can't just take away screens. You have to offer something better.

60 Things I Can Do Instead of Screens (Screen-Free Activities for Kids)

A full poster of engaging, fun alternatives:

  • Creative activities
  • Physical activities
  • Social activities
  • Learning activities
  • Outdoor adventures

When kids say "I'm bored," they point to this list and choose.

50 More Things I Can Do Instead of Screens (Real-World Skills for Kids)

Goes deeper - activities that build actual life skills:

  • Cooking
  • Building/fixing things
  • Organization
  • Communication
  • Problem-solving
  • Money management

These aren't just "activities to pass time" - these are skills that build confidence and capability.

7. ADDICTION PREVENTION & INTERVENTION

Tips for Managing Screen Time Addiction

How to recognize early signs:

  • Withdrawal when screens are taken away
  • Lying about screen use
  • Declining interest in other activities
  • Mood changes related to screens
  • Sleep disruption

Plus: Specific strategies to intervene before it becomes a serious problem.

Steps to Help Someone Break Free from Screen Time Addiction

If addiction has already set in, this is your roadmap:

  • How to have the conversation
  • Setting up support systems
  • Gradual reduction strategies
  • Replacing screen habits with healthy habits
  • Rebuilding trust

Compassionate, effective, and respectful of your child.

8. BONUS: Email Course - Solving Screen-Related Issues and Modern Day Parenting Problems

You'll receive a multi-part email series that goes DEEP into your biggest concerns:

  • How to introduce screens without creating addiction
  • What to do if your child is already addicted
  • Handling screen-related tantrums and meltdowns
  • The truth about "educational" screen time
  • Gaming: when is it too much?
  • Social media for tweens and teens: how to navigate it
  • Keeping kids safe from predators, cyberbullying, and inappropriate content
  • Building digital citizenship
  • Having hard conversations about what they might see online
  • Islamic perspective on technology and screens
  • How to model healthy screen use yourself
  • Navigating screens during Ramadan and Islamic holidays

Your deepest questions, answered with Islamic values, psychological understanding, and practical strategies.

Total Value: $127

Your Investment Today: Just $37 $10

That's 71% off.

GET THE BUNDLE NOW FOR $10

FLASH SALE ENDS IN:

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Why This Is Different From Everything You've Tried

❌ What Doesn't Work:

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Time Limits Alone:

  • Kids negotiate, manipulate, sneak extra time
  • You're the enforcer, always fighting
  • Doesn't teach WHY or HOW to self-regulate
  • Arbitrary numbers that don't match responsibilities
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Banning Screens:

  • Not realistic in modern world
  • Kids resent you
  • They'll binge later
  • Doesn't teach them how to handle technology responsibly
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Hoping They'll "Figure It Out":

  • They won't
  • Screens are designed to be addictive
  • Kids need explicit teaching
  • Waiting = watching them develop bad habits
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Educational Apps Only:

  • Kids know these are just screens by another name
  • Doesn't address balance or safety
  • Doesn't teach responsibility
  • They'll seek other content anyway

✅ What Makes This Work:

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1. Teaches SELF-REGULATION, Not Obedience

Your child learns to ask themselves:

  • "Have I earned screen time today?"
  • "Am I feeling screen fatigue?"
  • "Is this safe?"
  • "What else could I do instead?"

They become the decision-maker. You become the guide.

This is the skill that will serve them in college, career, and life.

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2. Provides ALTERNATIVES, Not Just Restrictions

Most parents take away screens and offer... nothing.

This playbook gives your child 110+ alternative activities that are just as appealing, accessible, and fun.

You're not taking away. You're expanding their world.

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3. Focuses on SAFETY, Not Fear

You're not banning screens out of terror.

You're teaching them:

  • How to recognize danger
  • How to make safe choices
  • Who to turn to for help
  • What to do if something goes wrong

Confident, prepared kids are safe kids.

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4. Builds TRUST, Not Control

The contracts, the self-check-ins, the safety rules - these aren't about controlling your child.

They're about building a partnership where:

  • You trust them with increasing responsibility
  • They earn your trust through demonstrated responsibility
  • Communication stays open
  • Mistakes become learning opportunities

This strengthens your relationship instead of damaging it.

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5. Integrates ISLAMIC VALUES

Screen time isn't separate from your child's character development.

This playbook helps them see:

  • Time is an amanah from Allah
  • Our behavior online reflects our deen
  • Wasting time is a spiritual issue
  • Guarding their heart and mind is part of taqwa

Technology becomes part of raising a Muslim with strong character, not opposed to it.

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6. Prevents ADDICTION Before It Starts

Most resources address screen addiction after it's a problem.

This playbook teaches your child to:

  • Recognize early warning signs in themselves
  • Take breaks before addiction forms
  • Balance screens with real life from the beginning
  • Understand how screens affect their brain and emotions

Prevention is 100x easier than intervention.

Who is the Screen Time Responsibilities PlayBook for?

  • Parents terrified of screens (you'll learn how to allow them safely)
  • Parents who've lost control (you'll regain it through responsibility framework)
  • Kids ages 5-15 (different tools for different stages)
  • Muslim families (Islamic values woven throughout)
  • Homeschool families (online learning safety included)
  • Kids already showing addiction signs (intervention tools included)
  • Parents who want to prevent problems (before they start)
  • Families navigating social media (safety rules and training included)
  • Single parents (contracts help maintain consistency)
  • Two-parent homes where you disagree (contracts create unified approach)

"But What If My Child Is Already Addicted?"

Then you especially need this.

Here's the truth: You can't just take screens away and hope it gets better.

Addiction needs:

  • Recognition (Help them see it)
  • Alternatives (Give them something better)
  • Support (Walk with them through it)
  • Skills (Teach them to self-regulate)
  • Trust rebuilding (Repair the relationship)

This playbook has all five.

The "Steps to Help Someone Break Free from Screen Time Addiction" guide walks you through the exact process.

The screen-free activities give them alternatives.

The self-check-in tools teach recognition and self-regulation.

The contracts rebuild trust.

It's not a quick fix. But it's a real fix.

And the email course addresses the hardest questions:

  • How to have the conversation
  • What to do when they resist
  • How to stay consistent
  • When to get professional help

"My Child Is Only 6. Isn't This Too Early?"

No. It's the perfect time.

The best time to teach responsible screen use is BEFORE they have unlimited access.

You teach them to:

  • Cross streets safely before letting them walk alone
  • Use scissors before giving them knives
  • Brush teeth before cavities form

Screen responsibility is the same.

Start early with:

  • Basic safety rules
  • Self-check-in habits
  • Balance between screens and play
  • Recognizing screen fatigue

By the time they're teens and have their own devices, these habits are already formed.

"What If My Child Can't Read Yet?"

Perfect! The tools are designed to work at multiple levels:

For Pre-Readers (Ages 4-7):

  • Visual posters with pictures
  • Simple check-in charts you review together
  • You read the rules, they follow along
  • Builds the foundation before they can read

For Emerging Readers (Ages 7-10):

  • They can read and reference independently
  • Still check in with you regularly
  • Building self-regulation skills
  • Learning to make safe choices with guidance

For Independent Kids (Ages 10+):

  • Fully independent use of self-check-ins
  • Contracts become real agreements
  • Safety rules become internalized
  • They're ready to handle increasing digital freedom

The playbook grows with your child.

"We Don't Have Screens in Our Home"

That's okay. You still need this.

Here's why:

  • Your child will encounter screens elsewhere (friends' houses, school, library, eventually their own device)
  • When they DO get access, they need to already know the framework (not learn it while having unrestricted access)
  • Prevention is easier than intervention (teach the principles now, apply them when needed)
  • The activities lists are valuable anyway (110+ screen-free activities your kids can do)
  • You're preparing them for the real world (which includes technology)

Think of it as digital literacy education, even if you don't have devices yet.

By the time they're teens, they WILL have access (at college, work, or through friends). Better they're trained than clueless.

Real Parents, Real Results:

"I was one of those parents who banned screens completely because I was terrified. But my 11-year-old was getting left out socially and resenting me. This playbook taught me how to allow screens SAFELY. The self-check-in tools are brilliant - my daughter regulates herself now. I don't have to be the bad guy anymore."

— Amina, mom of 3

"My son was showing signs of gaming addiction. I felt helpless. The 'Steps to Break Free' guide walked me through the conversation, and the alternatives list gave him actual things to do. It's been 3 months and he's a different kid. Still games sometimes, but he's balanced now."

— Yusuf, dad of 2

"The Islamic values poster was a game-changer for us. My kids actually THINK before going online now: 'Is this wasting the time Allah gave me?' It connects their deen to their daily choices. That's powerful."

— Khadijah, homeschool mom of 4

I didn't realize how much my kids needed ALTERNATIVES. I was taking away screens but offering nothing better. The 110 activities lists changed everything. Now when they're bored, they have options that are just as fun."

— Sarah, mom of 2

"The contracts transformed our relationship around screens. Instead of me dictating and them sneaking, we have an agreement we both signed. They take it seriously. Trust is building."

— Zainab, mom of 3

"My 13-year-old wanted social media and I was terrified to say yes. The Social Media Safety Rules gave me a framework to say 'yes, with training.' She's responsible because I taught her to be, not because I banned it."

— Marium, mom of 2

What Happens If You Don't Address This Now?

6 months from now:

  • Your child has formed screen habits (good or bad)
  • If bad habits, they're harder to break
  • If you banned screens, resentment has grown
  • Opportunities to teach responsibility have passed

1 year from now:

  • Screen battles are deeply entrenched
  • Your child may be sneaking devices
  • Trust has eroded
  • They're one year closer to having unrestricted access (teen years)

5 years from now:

  • Your child is a teen with their own device
  • They never learned self-regulation
  • You have no framework for safety conversations
  • They're navigating social media, online dangers, and digital life without training

6 months from now:

  • Your child self-regulates screen time
  • They know how to stay safe online
  • You have a positive relationship around technology
  • Screen time isn't a daily battle

1 year from now:

  • Responsible screen habits are automatic
  • Your child recognizes screen fatigue and takes breaks
  • They balance real-world activities with digital ones
  • You trust them, they've earned it

5 years from now:

  • Your teen handles their own device responsibly
  • They know how to protect themselves online
  • Your relationship is strong because you taught, not banned
  • They have a lifelong skill in digital citizenship

The choice you make today shapes which path you're on.

Limited Time: Download for $10 today (Normally: $37)

Your Investment

This Screen Time Responsibility Playbook contains

  • 21 printable tools and resources
  • Multi-part email course
  • Safety frameworks
  • Self-regulation training
  • Addiction prevention & intervention guides
  • 110+ screen-free activity ideas
  • Islamic values integration
  • Age-appropriate guidance
  • Contract templates
  • Self-check-in systems

Similar resources cost:

  • Parenting courses on screen time: $200-500
  • One-on-one coaching: $100-300/session
  • Books on digital parenting: $20-30 each (and you'd need several)
  • Educational consultations: $150+

Total value: $127

Your price today: $37 $10

That's the cost of one month of a streaming service your kids probably watch too much of anyway.


100% GUARANTEE

My Promise to You:

Use this playbook for 60 days.

If you don't see:

  • Increased self-regulation from your child
  • Fewer screen time battles
  • Better balance between screens and real-world activities
  • More confidence in keeping your child safe online
  • A framework you can use for years

...I'll refund every penny.

You risk nothing. Your child gains a lifelong skill.

Get the Screen Time Responsibilities Playbook - $37 $10

✅ 21 printable tools & resources
✅ Email course on modern parenting challenges
✅ Safety frameworks for online, social media, messaging
✅ Self-check-in systems kids can use independently
✅ Addiction prevention & intervention guides
✅ 110+ screen-free activity alternatives
✅ Islamic values integration
✅ Screen time & media contracts
✅ Age-appropriate guidance
✅ Lifetime access + future updates
✅ 60-day money-back guarantee

Total Value: $127 | Your Price: $37 $10

Still Deciding?

Let me address what you're probably thinking:

"Can't I just Google this information for free?"

You could. And you'll find:

  • Conflicting advice
  • Generic solutions that don't fit your values
  • Scattered information you have to piece together
  • Nothing that addresses Islamic parenting
  • No actual tools to implement
  • Hours of searching and confusion

Or you can have the complete system in 5 minutes.

Already organized, Islamic-values aligned, with actual tools ready to print and use today.

Your time is worth more than $37.

"My child will just lie on the self-check-ins"

Possibly, at first.

That's why the contracts are important - they establish consequences for dishonesty.

But here's what's interesting: When kids have a framework, they actually want to follow it.

The self-check-ins aren't about catching them in lies. They're about teaching them to be honest with themselves.

And the "Recognizing Screen-Related Emotions" tool helps them WANT to take breaks (because they feel better when they do).

You're building internal motivation, not just external compliance.

Is this a physical book?

No, this is not a book. It is a digital resources for you to download and print at your convenience.

Please note that nothing will be shipped to you. You will receive a file of PDFs to be downloaded from your email inbox.

What is your return policy?

We are confident that this Screen Time Responsibilities for Kids PlayBook will pay for itself within a few days. But due to the digital nature of this product, we are unable to provide a return or refund.

"What if my child doesn't use the self-check-in tools?"

Then you use them together at first.

These aren't "hand your kid a poster and hope."

You:

  • Introduce each tool
  • Model how to use it
  • Practice together
  • Gradually release responsibility
  • Check in regularly

The email course walks you through implementation.

This is a training process, not a magic fix.

But once the habits form? They last a lifetime.

"This seems like a lot of work"

Compared to what?

  • Daily screen time battles for the next 10 years?
  • Dealing with screen addiction in your teen?
  • Repairing trust after they're caught doing something unsafe online?
  • Worrying constantly about what they're exposed to?

Yes, teaching responsibility takes effort.

But it's an investment that pays dividends for life.

Setup: 1-2 hours (printing, laminating if desired, introducing tools)
Implementation: 2-3 weeks of consistent check-ins
Result: Years of self-regulating, responsible screen use

You're choosing between 2 hours now or 1000 hours of battles later.

Is this product suitable for classroom use?

Absolutely! The Screen Time Responsibilities for Kids PlayBook is an excellent resource for classrooms.

It provides educators with engaging tools and strategies to teach students about safe and balanced technology use.

With age-appropriate activities and discussions on digital responsibility, this playbook can enhance your curriculum and support students in developing essential life skills in a digital world.

How soon after purchasing will I receive my bundle?

You should receive access (almost) immediately! Your bundle will be delivered digitally, via the email address you provide at checkout. It should arrive within 5-10 minute of your purchase.

If you don't see it, be sure to check your spam or promotions folders, and if you still don't see it, please contact us immediately at aysh[@]jeddahmom[.]com

This Is About More Than Screens

Yes, this playbook solves your screen time problems.

But it's really teaching your child:

🧠 Self-regulation - a skill they need for everything (eating, spending, time management, emotions)

🎯 Responsibility - that privileges come with obligations

🛡️ Safety awareness - how to recognize and avoid danger (online and offline)

⚖️ Balance - that life is richer when you don't overdo anything

🤝 Trust - how to earn it and keep it

💭 Self-awareness - recognizing how things affect them

🕌 Islamic values in modern life - that faith applies to technology too

These are life skills disguised as screen time tools.

Your child will use these principles in:

  • Managing their time in college
  • Balancing work and personal life
  • Making safe choices as adults
  • Teaching their own children someday

You're not just solving a current problem. You're shaping their future.

The Decision You're Really Making:

This isn't about whether to spend $37.

It's about which parenting approach you want:

Option A: Fear-Based

  • Ban screens because you're scared
  • Constantly worry when they do get access
  • Be the enforcer and bad guy
  • Hope they figure it out eventually

Option B: Permissive

  • Let them have unlimited access
  • Hope it doesn't become a problem
  • Deal with addiction if it happens
  • React to problems as they arise

Option C: Responsibility-Based

  • Teach them how to handle screens
  • Give them tools to self-regulate
  • Build trust through earned privileges
  • Prevent problems before they start
  • Prepare them for real-world digital life

Option C requires an investment of $37 and 2 hours of setup.

Options A and B are "free" but will cost you years of stress, battles, and damaged relationships.

GET IT NOW FOR JUST $10!

Meet Your Trainer...

Ayesha I. Siddiqua M.Sc - CEO, Behaviour Therapist, Mom

Assalamualikum,

As someone who has been working online for 22 years, I understand first hand the struggles and triumphs of navigating screen time in a tech-driven world.

And as a mother of teen and tweens - 11, 12 and 18 years old, I know the digital challenges families face today.

I have been teaching parents about ideal children's routines and Positive Parenting on Jeddah Mom since 2013. Teaching healthy screen-time balance is something I am very serious about.

In this training, I am sharing everything I've learnt about raising tech-savvy-yet-responsible kids.

Join me to explore effective and compassionate ways to guide your children toward responsible and balanced screen use, ensuring their well-being in the digital age.

One Last Thing:

Your child is growing up in a digital world whether you like it or not.

You can't protect them from it forever. But you CAN prepare them for it.

The parents who thrive aren't the ones who banned screens or gave up control.

They're the ones who taught their kids to be responsible digital citizens.

And that starts with a decision you make today.

[YES - Give Me the Screen Time Responsibilities Playbook for $37]Simply click the button below for instant access.

P.S. - The email course alone is worth the price. Parents tell me the insights on addiction, safety, and Islamic perspectives transformed their entire approach to modern parenting.

P.P.S. - Your child is using screens today (or will be tomorrow). Every day you wait is another day of forming habits - good or bad. Which habits do you want them to form?

P.P.P.S. - You'll spend $37 on something forgettable this month anyway. Spend it on something that protects your child, builds trust, and teaches a lifelong skill.

LIMITED TIME OFFER: BUY NOW FOR $37 $10