Screen Time Guidance for Ages 5 to 16 Is Coming: What the Government Announced
Published 10 June 2026. Every fact in this post was checked against GOV.UK and the Department...

This morning, one child built a cardboard ramp for a marble. The other used lipstick to write “NO ENTRY” on her bedroom door. Later they argued about whether Pluto is a planet, watched a documentary about volcanoes, and made 12 (slightly wonky) pancakes.
At 4.30pm I stood in the kitchen and wondered: “Wait. Did we… learn anything today?”
If you’ve ever had that same wobble – welcome. You’re not doing it wrong. You’re just living in the space where education and life blur beautifully together. And it can feel like freefall.
When you leave behind worksheets, assessments and neat tick boxes, it’s easy to panic. You start second-guessing the days that don’t look like “school”.
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But here’s the truth: learning doesn’t always look like school. And it’s not meant to. That’s the point.
Let me say this gently and clearly:
If your child is curious, asking questions, trying things out, making mess, solving problems, or simply wondering – that’s learning.
And to prove it, here are 21 things that totally count (even if your school brain is side-eyeing them right now):
I’ve turned this list into a printable fridge poster called “Yes, This Counts” – so the next time doubt creeps in, you’ve got a gentle reminder at eye level.
👉 Click here to download the free printable
Stick it to the fridge. Tuck it in your planner. Share it with a friend. You’re doing more than enough.
You are.
Learning isn’t always measurable. It doesn’t always end in a finished project or neat answer. Sometimes it’s invisible for weeks, then bursts out all at once in a random car park conversation about tectonic plates.
So next time you ask, “Is this even learning?” – the answer is probably yes.
And if not? Tomorrow is another day. Another pancake. Another brilliant, weird, educational mess.
I’ve turned this list into a printable fridge poster called “Yes, This Counts” – so the next time doubt creeps in, you’ve got a gentle reminder at eye level.
If this post helped soothe your brain or heart, feel free to forward it to another home ed mum having a wobble today. We’ve all been there. And we’re all still learning too.
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