sungura collaboratiive solutions

FLC...AI?

For the parent who wants their kid learning this summer —
and isn't sure they're the one who's supposed to teach it.
You are. You just don't have to know the answers.

Your child learns best
when they get to teach you.

A free summer learning program for K–5 families. Every week, your child becomes the guide — supported by a gentle AI learning space and five hands-on activities using what's already in your home.

Tell Us Where You AreNo cost. Thirty families this summer. Tell me a little about your child.

Let's name the real thing

The summer slide is real. So is the feeling that you can't fix it.

Most summer learning comes in three flavors: it costs money you'd rather spend elsewhere, it asks you to become a teacher you were never trained to be, or it hands your child a screen and calls the silence "progress." If none of those fit your family, you end up doing what most of us do — hoping the fall sorts it out.

Here's the quiet part. A lot of parents don't step in because they believe they're not qualified. They think helping means knowing — the right answer, the right method, the way the school does it. That belief is the only real barrier here, and it isn't true.

This program is built on the opposite idea. Your child doesn't need you to have the answers. They need you to be curious, to think out loud, to be taught. When a child explains something to you, that's the moment the learning locks in — for them. Your not-knowing isn't a gap. It's the whole design.

How we move

Three ideas the whole thing flows from.

Nothing here requires a printer, a curriculum binder, or an hour you don't have. Each week moves through the same simple shape — and you can step in as much or as little as the week allows.

The child leads

Your child is set up as the teacher. They ask the questions, you do the thinking out loud, and they help you get there. It feels like a game. It's actually how understanding gets proven — you can't teach what you don't yet hold.

The screen meets the kitchen table

Every week pairs a short AI learning space with five hands-on activities built from things you already own — a sandwich, a jar of beans, a walk around the block. The screen starts the idea. Your hands are where it lands.

Two ways in, no wrong way

If you can sit down and be taught this week — wonderful. If the week is too full, your child works through the same ideas with an AI guide instead. Both count fully. The door between them is always open, and never pushes.

A gentle gut-check

This might be right for you if…

  • You have a child in kindergarten through fifth grade and a summer that's about to get quiet.
  • You'd rather your kid talk to you about ideas than disappear into another app.
  • You've felt that small guilt about "not doing enough" over the summer — and you're tired of it.
  • You want to see what good AI actually looks like in a child's hands, instead of worrying about it.
  • Some weeks you'll have an evening to spare, and some weeks you won't — and you need a program that's fine with both.
  • You're an educator who wants to try this with your own kids before you ever bring it near a classroom.

Who's on the other side of this

It's one person, and his Sunday nights.

I'm Aaron. I work in a school, I study how AI can support learning, and I build tools for families and organizations that usually get left out of the good stuff. This program isn't a company or a product — it's me, dedicating my Sunday nights to writing the week's learning so it's ready when your family wakes up Monday.

I'm starting with thirty families because that's what one person can hold well. I'd rather do this carefully for thirty than carelessly for three hundred. If it works, it grows — at the speed I can actually keep the quality. You'd be in at the beginning, and your kid's summer would help shape what this becomes.

No commitment to decide right now.

Just tell me a little about your child — their grade, what they're into, how your weeks tend to go. That's how I figure out where to meet you. No pitch comes after. Either it's a fit for this summer or it isn't, and either answer is fine.

Tell Us Where You Are

Learning was never meant to stop at the school door. Let it flow home.

The Family Learning Current
A Sungura Collaborative · Braickish project  ·  © 2026