Digital Safety: Parents are Worried. Teens are Too.

Digital Safety: Parents are Worried. Teens are Too.

Digital Safety is on the minds of moms, dads and our teens.

As a mom to a 15-year-old with a mobile phone, I know the digital worry all too well. We live in an age where screens are part of nearly every moment of our kids’ day. From schoolwork to socializing and yes, sometimes even distraction. Even if we try to navigate digital life with love, calm conversations, and practical tools, that nagging concern never fully goes away.

But we’re not alone. Not surprisingly, and increasingly, our kids are feeling it too.

Real Teens, Real Perspectives

A January 2026 Pew Research Center survey reveals something striking:

About 4 in 10 teens (41%) support banning cellphones during class time. Fewer, only about 17% support banning phones for the entire school day.  

These numbers may not surprise us, teens naturally want autonomy, but what’s powerful is that many teens are now willing to say that less phone use at school might be a good thing. They’re noticing, too, that constant connection isn’t always healthy. Not just disruptive to teachers or parents, but to their own focus, wellbeing, and friendships.

Why This Matters to Moms

For years, parents have worried about:

    •    digital distractions in school

    •    social media pressures

    •    unsafe texting or interactions

    •    the role of AI and online privacy

Turns out, our kids are not entirely dismissive of these concerns. They understand that phones can be both helpful and harmful, a tool for safety and connection, yes – but also one that can pull them away from attention, calm, and meaning.

This alignment, where parents and teens both see the digital tension, opens up a beautiful space for deeper conversations, mutual understanding, and intentional boundaries.

How I’m Navigating It at Home

In our family, we don’t just talk about digital safety, we practice it together.

We use the Aura Digital Safety app to help set healthy boundaries, protect privacy, and reduce anxiety around online interactions (Aura lets you monitor your kid’s phone use without prying too much or reading through their activity on the phone).

We talk openly about:

    •    texting with respect and safety

    •    online interactions and digital consent

    •    being thoughtful with AI and screen time

No fear. No shaming. Just honest heart-to-heart conversations that respect my teen’s voice, and my role as a parent.

Our Teen’s Next Step

My 15-year-old is taking this a step further, he has been writing to our state representative to advocate for better digital safety awareness for teens. That’s courage, and it’s something every mom can be inspired by.

If you’ve ever wondered how to channel your concern into positive action, there’s a simple step you can take right now. Write your lawmakers about digital safety policies. Whether it’s school phone guidelines, online protections, or support for digital wellbeing resources. You can find your state representatives here:

Find Your State Representatives

You’re Not Alone

If you wake up some days feeling unsure, wondering if you’re doing enough, saying the right things, or building the right digital habits (me too), take heart. You are present. You are talking about the hard stuff, and that matters more than perfection.

We are in this together — one earnest MOMent at a time.

Let’s keep talking, keep encouraging our teens, and keep shaping a digital future that protects their hearts as much as their minds. 

x. Earnest Mom

Why We Chose Faith Based Homeschool (And what it really looks like)

Why We Chose Faith Based Homeschool (And what it really looks like)

We did not choose to homeschool because we had it all figured out. To be honest, I am 6 years in and still learning. But we did choose it anyway, knowing it was what we wanted for our family.

It started off subtly, a quiet tug. The kind of tug that shows up in late night prayers, car conversations, and the ache of sending kids back to school after summer and holiday breaks. We wanted our children to know truth, not just facts. To grow in wisdom, not just information.

Faith-based homeschooling, for us, is not about having perfect lessons, or Instagram worthy days. It is about inviting God into the ordinary. Reading scripture at the homeschool table, pausing math to talk through big feelings and frustrations. Learning history through the lens of God’s goodness and plans, not human achievement alone.

Some days are quiet and full, others feel scattered and unfinished. But what we are learning is this: faithfulness is not loud. It is often found in the small, unseen moments and unspoken choices.

Homeschool has given us space. Space to slow down, to notice our children, and to trust that God is at work even when the days feel incomplete.

If you are standing on the edge of this decision, unsure and prayerful, please know that you are not behind. You do not need all of the answers. Sometimes obedience looks like taking the next soft step toward what God is calling you to.

We are learning as we go – one earnest MOMent at a time.

If you are discerning homeschool with prayer, you are welcome here. You can find weekly encouragement and gentle reflections linked below.

Earnest Mom || Substack

Planning a Homeschool Year with Prayer. (+ Free Printable Planner Pages and Editable 2025-26 Calendar)

Planning a Homeschool Year with Prayer. (+ Free Printable Planner Pages and Editable 2025-26 Calendar)

When we first began homeschooling, I earnestly believed the most important thing was finding the perfect curriculum. I spent hours and hours researching lesson plans, charts, posters, planners, etc. Overwhelming at best! But the truth is – what my homeschool really needed was not a flawless plan. It was prayer.

Prayer reminds us that God is the one leading our homeschool, not us. It shifts the focus from getting all the things done, to walking with Him and letting Him lead.

That is why this year instead of simply mapping mathematics or history timelines, I am starting with prayer and I want to remind you mama, you can start here too.

Start with praying before the planning. Before you open your planner, open your heart and ask the Lord to guide you in the process. You can ask Him:

  • What do my children need this year – not only academically but spiritually and emotionally too?
  • Where do we need to slow down? Where can we grow deeper?
  • How can our homeschool point to You, in every lesson and every day?

Next, plan with purpose and not pressure. Planning with prayer means shifting from rigid checklists to purposeful rhythms. Instead of asking, “What do we need to get through?” ask:

  • How do I want the days to feel?
  • What values do I want to weave into our learning?
  • Where can we create space for joy, rest and connection?

Be willing to change your plans. Homeschool is full of surprises. Sickness, field trips, life interruptions – God uses them all. When you plan with prayer, you give yourself freedom to adjust and trust that detours can be divine. Instead of trying to control the year, commit it to God and hold your plans loosely. (I am telling myself this daily while planning – I need to let God more than I let me!)

Dedicate your year to the Lord. Once your planner or calendar is filled – pray over them. Lay your homeschool, and the hearts of you and your children at the feet of the saviour. Ask him to lead you, teach you and let the whole year be His. Pray together before your year starts – as a whole school household. Ask him to bless your learning, conversations and growth.

Our homeschool year officially starts next week with a back to school party with fellow homeschool friends. However we always launch in August with a mini unit to get back in the school day rhythm. In planning these last few weeks, I have created a 2025-26 calendar, daily planning sheet (that I will laminate and use daily), our read aloud booklist (we are a read aloud family – curious? Check out my previous article), and a booklist sheet for each of my children.

Like what you see? You are welcome to access the Earnest Mom Homeschool Planner Bundle – FREE! Click the link, then select ‘Use template’ to open and edit your own copy in Canva. That’s it!

Remember mama, we are in this together, one Earnest (and prayerful) MOMent at a time!

Love, Earnest Mom