11 activities ready · cohort complete
Spotting a 'please don't tell your parent' message
Adults who want to harm children online use specific, recognisable patterns — secrecy requests, flattery, gifts, platform switches. This activity teaches those patterns by name, and practises a clear response.
Creating a strong password you can remember
The passphrase method — a silly sentence that's both secure and memorable. Prerequisite for the password manager activity.
Following a story back to where it started
The SIFT method — Stop, Investigate the source, Find better coverage, Trace claims to origin. Includes a timed 60-second source trace activity.
Using a password manager
A family setup activity for Bitwarden or 1Password — Diceware master passphrase, one-time setup, all accounts in one place. Requires the strong password activity first.
Spotting hidden advertising — when someone you like is paid to say so
Influencer marketing, parasocial trust, and the #ad disclosure rules. Includes an Ad Detective Challenge activity with printable examples.
Is this an ad, or did they really mean it?
The Disclosure Clock — when disclosure appears in a video matters as much as whether it appears. Includes the Ad Read Challenge with five screenshot scenarios. Builds on the hidden advertising module.
When I remix something, I name who made the original
Fan art, memes, Roblox mods, TikTok stitches — every remix credits the creator. Creative Commons, Canadian Copyright Act, Crown copyright, and the Sources Named Running Count activity.
Making a story with AI as my helper, not my author
The My Line / AI Line rule — write 7 of 10 lines yourself. Covers AI-assisted vs AI-generated, the story ownership meter, and a no-login variant using pre-printed sentence options. No account needed.
Asking good questions when I search or ask AI
From vague to searchable — the Three-Why Game, comparing Google vs AI answers, and understanding why different sources return different results.
When the computer just agrees with you
Your mission: catch a chatbot being a suck-up. Why AI is built to agree with you, a low-stakes experiment to prove it, and the rule that sounding sure is not the same as being right.
When online pressure crosses a line
The coercion spectrum from uncomfortable peer pressure to real threats. The surprises-vs-secrets test. Screenshot threats, exclusion threats, image-based coercion — and a practised phrase for when pressure crosses a line.