
My 11-Year-Old Just Became My AI Teacher (And I'm Here for It)
Jun 12, 2025How my AI Natives remind me daily that curiosity trumps fear when it comes to new technology
Last week, I was exploring Canva for a graphic to use in a presentation. You know the feeling—staring at a blank Canva screen (or PowerPoint or Google Slides), cycling through templates that just weren't quite right, when my 11-year-old daughter casually walked by my desk.
"Mom, why don't you just ask Canva's AI to make it for you?"
Wait. What?
Turns out, while I'd been manually dragging and dropping elements like it was 2015, she'd already discovered Canva's Magic Design feature. Within minutes, she was showing me how to describe what I wanted and watch the AI generate multiple graphics and design options that were better than anything I'd been cobbling together.
My kid just became my teacher. And honestly? It wasn't the first time.
Crossing The Curiosity Chasm
Here's what I've learned from watching my daughters navigate the world: they approach it with unabashed curiosity. Whether they’re turning over logs to search for frogs along a reservoir, asking endless “what if” questions, or trying to re-enact a science experiment they saw on TV, curiosity is underpinning it all. When it comes to the technology that surrounds us all, they don’t approach it with the baggage that we adults carry. They don't worry about "doing it wrong" or whether they'll break something. They just...try it. And when it comes to AI, if they don’t know how it works, they just…ask it!
My youngest is already asking Alexa to help her with math homework (I’ve let her know that’s not gonna fly in our house). My oldest asks ChatGPT direct questions like “are you real?” to deepen her understanding of these pervasive tools. They're not intimidated by AI—they're curious about it.
Meanwhile, I catch myself overthinking prompts, second-guessing whether I'm "using AI correctly," worrying about not learning it fast enough, or wondering if I’m becoming too dependent on it.
But watching them has shifted something fundamental in how I approach these tools.
What AI Natives Teach Us About Learning
My daughters don't see AI as this big, scary technological shift. To them, it's just another tool in their toolkit, like Google or calculators or spell-check. They approach it with what I call "no judgment curiosity"—that willingness to experiment without needing to understand every technical detail first.
This mindset has become my daily inspiration. When I'm working on go-to-market strategies, new market research projects, or tackling parenting tasks like summer scheduling or travel planning, I find myself asking: What would my daughters do here? How would they approach this?
The answer is always the same: they'd be curious and just start trying things. They’d try to get to know the AI to learn how to best get along.
And they’re already figuring out which everyday AI tools work best for them.
The Permission to Play
Perhaps what I love most about learning from my AI Natives is how they've given me permission to approach technology with playfulness instead of pressure. They don't expect to master everything immediately. They don't worry about looking foolish while they figure things out.
They just explore.
And in a world where AI is advancing faster than any of us can keep up with, maybe that's exactly the mindset we need. Not the pressure to become experts overnight, but the willingness to stay curious, to keep learning, and to remember that some of our best teachers might just be sitting at our kitchen table doing their math homework.
Your Turn to Get Curious
The next time you're hesitant to try a new AI tool or feature, I challenge you to channel your inner 11-year-old. Ask yourself: What would happen if I just... tried it?
Start small. Experiment. Don't worry about doing it "right" the first time. And don’t be afraid to even try asking the AI tooI questions like “what’s the best way to work with you?” or “where should I begin?”
And if you have kids or young people in your life, pay attention to how they approach technology. They might just teach you something that transforms how you work.
What's the most surprising thing you've learned about AI from a young person in your life? I'd love to hear your stories—because honestly, I'm still learning something new from my AI Natives every single day.
P.S. - If you want to explore more ways to integrate AI into your marketing workflow without the overwhelm, check out my AI-powered go-to-market resources. Sometimes the best way to get comfortable with new tools is having a proven framework to guide you through the process.