Turn the moment into the lesson.
You bring the moment — a question, a conflict, a hard situation. We give you the twenty-minute structure to turn it into something that sticks.
Get early access
No child accounts. No expertise required. We never collect information about your child.
The lesson happens in the room, not on the screen.
Three steps. Twenty minutes. No prep.
Step 1
Pick what to focus on
Choose a theme — money, trust, relationships, AI — then the skill you want to build. You're choosing what matters this week, not committing to anything.
Step 2
Run it together
The app gives you everything — a step-by-step guide, conversation starters, and what to watch for. No extra prep. No devices. Just you, the activity, and twenty minutes with your kid.
Step 3
Come back when you're ready
Your library holds every experience you've run. Each session builds on the last. The app surfaces what's next when you are.
The conversations happen. The structure doesn't.
You're in the car. Your kid says something that matters — about money, about someone getting left out, about something they saw online. You say something worth hearing.
Then someone's phone buzzes. Dinner gets cold. The moment passes.
The gap isn't awareness or intention. It's not having a ready structure. Lemonade Literacy gives you that structure — so the moment doesn't disappear before it becomes something that sticks.
Focus on the skills school rarely has time to teach.
Every lesson sits inside one of five themes — each one a skill area your child will use for the rest of their life.
Money Mindset
- Fair exchange
- Comparison
- Value judgment
The judgment behind earning, spending, saving, and understanding value.
Trade household objects — no money allowed. Argue both sides of whether the deal was fair, and what made one trade better than the other.
Real Relationships
- Empathy
- Perspective-taking
- Conflict resolution
Reading people, navigating conflict, communicating with intention.
Find a message that upset someone. Work out what the other person was thinking before responding. Then discuss whether knowing that changes how you'd reply.
Think Before You Trust
- Critical thinking
- Bias detection
- Ethical reasoning
Evaluating information, recognising bias, checking before acting.
Follow a set of simple rules to sort what gets recommended to who. Then discuss whether those rules were fair — and how this relates to artificial intelligence.
How the World Sees You
- Self-awareness
- Audience reading
- Reputation
Identity, reputation, and how choices shape how others perceive you.
Tell the same story about yourself to two different people. Notice what you changed without being asked to — then discuss why you made those changes.
Body and Mind
- Body awareness
- Emotional precision
- Stress recognition
Habits and self-awareness that help your child stay grounded.
Track how you feel at three different moments in the day. Put a precise name on each one — moving past "fine" and "tired." Then discuss what changed and what caused it.
A moment. A sequence. Either works.
Some weeks you have a moment. Some weeks you want to build something deliberate. Most parents end up using both.
Memorable Moments
Quick and situationalTurn a moment — a negotiation, a question, a disagreement at the checkout — into a learning experience on the spot. One activity, twenty minutes, no sequence required.
Literacy Packs
Progressive sessionsWhen you want to build a skill deliberately over time. Packs are curriculum-sequenced series of activities — each one building on the last. Add a pack to your library and work through it at your own pace.
See what a lesson looks like.
Each lesson gives you everything you need before you sit down with your kid — the activity, the questions, and what to watch for. Preview two real lessons below.
What we believe.
The doing is the learning.
A child can read about handling conflict. Nothing teaches it like the next real argument.
It's easier to learn from mistakes when costs are low.
A misstep at ten teaches something and costs nothing. The same one at twenty-five has a real price.
Shared experiences create meaningful moments.
A task done together becomes something you both remember. A lesson delivered alone rarely outlasts the week.
The skills that determine success won't appear on any report card.
School can teach many things. Making good decisions in difficult situations is not one of them.
What happens outside school reinforces what happens inside.
A lesson taught in the classroom stays abstract. The same concept applied at work or in the playground sticks.
Understanding how technology works gives you choices.
Knowing what an app does with your data changes how you use it. Your child should know the same.
Your spot is waiting.
Lemonade Literacy is in limited early access. Join the waitlist and we'll reach out when your spot opens — along with a founding member rate we won't offer again.
No child accounts. No expertise required. We never collect information about your child.