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WHAT'S HAPPENING: ChatGPT excels at brainstorming and researching — both functions that can be uniquely useful to parents, says Celia Quillian, a product marketer in Atlanta who runs a
TikTok account advising followers on creative ways to use the robot. * The chatbot could plan an 8-year-old's mermaid-themed birthday party in seconds, offering drink ideas like mermaid
fruit punch — blue Gatorade with floating gummy fish — and snack ideas like seashell cookies. * It can conjure up a chore chart for a group of young siblings, tailoring the tasks so
they're appropriate for each age. For example, a 7-year-old might start with picking up toys, while their 13-year-old sibling vacuums the living room. * It can even answer age-old
questions that kids ask exasperated parents. Think, "Why is the sky blue?" The chatbot will feed you an answer fit for a 4-year-old. ZOOM IN: Some parents are using the chatbot to
navigate even bigger milestones in their children's lives. * Parents have used it to script "the talk" with young teens or draft a toast for their child's wedding. WHAT
THEY'RE SAYING: Keith Foxx, principal at Foxxstem engineering services, regularly uses ChatGPT to connect to his third and youngest daughter, who's currently in 10th grade. * Foxx
says his daughter struggled through COVID and now he connects with her by sending her inspirational texts or poems. * "I'll say 'Give me a 16-line poem for a 15-year old, from
her dad. She needs motivation to go to school,'" Foxx told Axios. * Because he's able to get very specific in his prompts, the texts are personal. And if the result
doesn't sound like him, Foxx gets even more specific. * "I may have a follow-up that says, '"This is good, but, you know, can you do it for an African-American
dad?'" REALITY CHECK: "The idea of using it for something meaningful like communicating with your kids" raises flags, says Yuko Munakata, a psychologist at the University
of Colorado Boulder. "Parents know their kids way better than any AI system is going to be able to capture." * Kids, especially teens, will be able to tell when their parents are
using their own words versus those of a bot. "It's this stilted, artificial thing," says Munakata. "All of the things that would make it special are not going to be
there." * To this, Foxx argues that he keeps on prompting ChatGPT to get better results. He'll ask for responses from "a professional dad or a dad who really loves his
daughter and spends a lot of time with her." * Foxx says he isn't trying to fool his daughter, just to connect. The last time he sent her a poem, he adds, she responded with
"Thank you, Daddy" and a heart — "and then she was like, 'Did you use ChatGPT?'" THE BOTTOM LINE: "It's like with every new technology. Take it with a
grain of salt," Quillian says. "It's not an end-all, be-all."