Support your child's class with micro-sponsorships
Provide small rewards that motivate screen-free minutes at home and in school. Choose what to contribute and which challenge to back.
Easy to choose.
Browse teacher proposals near you and support the one that fits best.
Small rewards, big effect.
From a snack to classroom supplies — the habit you reinforce is what matters.
Fewer arguments, healthier habits.
Support the people building healthy habits at school — and bring that momentum home.
Help directly (and transparently)
Join as a family to back a nearby challenge, contribute a reward, and follow the class's progress.
Join as a familyThe Family: Micro-Sponsor of Wellbeing
Families, whether extended or single-parent, are a fundamental piece in the digital wellbeing puzzle and play an active role within our ecosystem. Often, in the fight against screen addiction, parents are forced to assume an unpleasant and repressive role, imposing punishments or withdrawing devices. Our platform transforms that dynamic: we invite families to become micro-sponsors of their children's digital health.
What does this mean in practice? It means that families stop being passive and worried observers to become strategic investors. Through the Sponsor Portal—the same one used by large companies—parents and relatives can actively participate by providing incentives. Thus, they have the ability to create tangible and specific rewards for their children and for their school groups.
By acting as micro-sponsors, families validate and reinforce the young people's disconnection effort. Instead of generating friction through prohibition, they bet on positive reinforcement. Let's imagine that, instead of arguing about mobile use at the table, a mother provides the prize for a challenge—individually or together with the teacher—in which accumulated disconnection minutes translate into a special snack for the whole class, a party, a barbecue, or tickets to the cinema or an event.
This role allows families to align their values with concrete actions and further increase the appeal of challenges, adding different layers of incentives: for example, several families collaborating with each other, or families joined with a company. By contributing rewards, they are not just handing over a prize; they are investing in raising young people's awareness about the value of time. In this way, families close the ecosystem circle, working hand in hand with educators and brands to build a truly sustainable economy of disconnection.
Before you support, these usually come up
Everything you need to know before becoming a micro-sponsor.
No. Individual sponsors do not contribute money, but concrete rewards: from a homemade cake or movie tickets to classroom supplies or your time for an activity. You help with personal gestures, not bank transfers.
It's not about punishment or guilt. We celebrate effort and self-control using positive reinforcement.
No apps or content are tracked. Only challenge progress (minutes stacked) is shared at a class/group level.