I don't know if you're looking for something less technology focused, but—have you ever seen Scratch? I teach classes in Scratch to kids professionally, and I happen to think it's a really excellent tool. Kids enjoy it a lot, and it teaches a mode of thinking that I consider essential for the modern world.
This isn't necessarily the be-all end-all way to teach Scratch (there are also official tutorials you can check out), but especially if you as the parent have some coding knowledge, they might be a fun way to learn together. Our philosophy is to provide a goal and some direction (for students who need it) without ever saying exactly what to do. This forces students to learn how to figure things out on their own.
https://scratch.mit.edu/
My company's curriculum is all public. I frankly don't love all of the projects, but some are pretty darn good. A few of my favorites:
Ghostbusters (Level 1): https://coding.space/launchpad/GqrsER3FnGgSZwyTYgkkDdyyty92-...
Apple Catcher (Level 2): https://coding.space/launchpad/703c1a8d-0c55-4bcb-b3ef-832ee...
Flappy Bird (Level 3): https://coding.space/launchpad/703c1a8d-0c55-4bcb-b3ef-832ee...
This isn't necessarily the be-all end-all way to teach Scratch (there are also official tutorials you can check out), but especially if you as the parent have some coding knowledge, they might be a fun way to learn together. Our philosophy is to provide a goal and some direction (for students who need it) without ever saying exactly what to do. This forces students to learn how to figure things out on their own.
Tiny note, notwithstanding my earlier praise of Scratch, it has one very frustrating design quirk that you might want to be aware of: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=31932147