Reduce Your Child's Screentime Without Conflict

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60 minutes • expires 24/06/2026

With Amit Kalley

End screentime arguments and create healthier digital boundaries.

Endless arguments over screens. Battles about phones at dinner, gaming at bedtime and “just five more minutes.” Sound familiar? This video is designed to help parents reduce their children’s screentime without conflict, power struggles or guilt. Through simple language shifts, better questions and a new way of approaching boundaries, learn how to move from policing screens to collaborating with children.

Watch this video and gain:

  • An understanding of why traditional “rules and restrictions” often lead to arguments.
  • Tools to have calmer, more constructive conversations about screentime.
  • Question-based strategies that help children reflect and self-regulate.
  • Guidelines to create a family Digital Charter, a realistic, flexible agreement that works for everyone in the home.

This is a positive, solution-focused session that gives parents tools they can use immediately to protect wellbeing, rebuild connection and restore harmony around screens.

More from Amit Kalley: Help Your Children To Open Up About Their School Day.

About Amit Kalley:

Amit is Founder of For Working Parents, a company that helps organisations become more inclusive for their working parents and employees. A former Deputy Headteacher, Amit uses his experience and his training as an ICF Coach to create an environment in the workplace that is more empathetic and human and where parents can thrive both at work and at home. In addition to running coaching sessions, training and webinars to raise parental awareness and develop effective parent to child communication, Amit also speaks publicly about his own personal story, having lost his mother to ovarian cancer and then becoming a parent to a daughter born with three holes in her heart. His keynote storytelling session tackles his journey of grief, loss and recovery from the perspective of a male from an ethnic minority and being diagnosed with ADHD well into adulthood.