Esther Wojcicki’s Best Parenting Tips for Mother’s Day
Esther Wojcicki is known as the “Godmother of Silicon Valley.” For 45 years, she taught journalism at a high school in Palo Alto, California. She also raised three very successful daughters. People often ask her how she did it.
By Caroline Brin ● Reviewed By Esther Wojcicki 05/09/26 2:33pm

Who Is She? The Educator Who Raised Silicon Valley’s Most Successful Families
Wojcicki was a journalism teacher and built a small journalism class of 20 students into a big program with 600 students and nine award-winning publications and three honorary doctorates. Famous people like Steve Jobs and Google’s founders came to visit her classroom in Palo Alto, California at Palo Alto High School.
From 20 Students to a National Powerhouse
For over four decades, Wojcicki walked into a classroom and did something remarkable: she convinced teenagers that their work mattered.
She took a journalism program with 20 kids and built it into a nationally recognized powerhouse with 600 students, nine award-winning publications, and a reputation that drew Steve Jobs, Google’s founders, and educators from across the country.
The Daughters Everyone Asks About
The question people ask most at conferences, in emails, at book signings..isn’t about the classroom. It’s about her daughters, Janet, Susan and Anne Wojcicki.
- Janet earned a Fulbright scholarship and became a professor at UCSF.
- Susan, before her tragic death in 2024, was the CEO of YouTube .
- Anne co-founded 23andMe.
Her Parenting Method: TRICK
Long before Wojcicki published How to Raise Successful People or launched the Parenting TRICK app, she was already living by a framework that ran counter to every dominant parenting trend of the era. While the culture swung between authoritarian control and the anxious over-management now called helicopter parenting, Wojcicki did something that looked almost radical: she trusted her kids.
Her entire approach rests on five words — Trust, Respect, Independence, Collaboration, and Kindness — and the acronym TRICK stuck.


T — Trust: The Hardest Instinct to Override
Trust demands that parents fight their instincts. When a child forgets homework, every parent’s hand moves toward the phone to call the teacher. Wojcicki’s answer: put the phone down. Coach the child to make that call instead. Trust isn’t passive — it’s the active belief that a child can handle what’s in front of them, demonstrated by stepping aside and letting them try.
R — Respect: Treating Kids Like People, Not Projects
Respect means treating children as people, not projects to optimize. At the Wojcicki dinner table, conversations ran two directions. The daughters spoke. The parents listened. Teenage opinions — half-formed, confidently wrong — got taken seriously anyway. Kids who feel respected start to act respectable. Wojcicki watched that pattern repeat across 45 years and thousands of students.
I — Independence: The Goal Every Parent Struggles to Practice
Independence is the hardest principle to raise successful children on. Wojcicki set a specific goal early in motherhood: make herself unnecessary. Not absent — unnecessary. She wanted daughters who could solve their own problems because they’d built the capacity for it, not because every obstacle had been removed before they arrived. Parents nod at independence in theory. Practicing it is another matter entirely.
Why her Parenting Advice is different
The parenting world today is full of fear. Companies sell tutoring, programs, and activities by making parents worry their kids will fall behind. Wojcicki says the opposite: worry less, let go more, and trust that your kids can handle more than you think.
C — Collaboration: Partners, Not Managers
Collaboration — the C in TRICK — sits at the center of her framework for exactly this reason. Raising independent children doesn’t mean parental disappearance. Kids flourish when parents show up as partners, not managers. The difference is one question: whose problem is this? A collaborative parent says, “Walk me through what happened.” A controlling parent says, “Here’s what you’re going to do.” The first builds a thinker. The second builds dependency.
K — Kindness: The Parenting Tool Nobody Talks About Enough
Kindness closes the loop — and Wojcicki means it precisely. Kindness isn’t conflict avoidance. It’s a baseline orientation toward children: assume good intent, respond to mistakes with curiosity rather than punishment, ask “What were you trying to do?” before “How could you?” Classrooms and homes that run on kindness raise kids who take risks, fail, and try again. Homes that run on fear raise kids who stop asking questions and start hiding the answers.
Teaching and Parenting Are the Same
Her students didn’t write fake practice articles. They wrote real ones that got published. She gave teenagers real responsibility — and they rose to the challenge year after year.
She used the same idea at home. Give kids real trust, real responsibility, and real room to make mistakes. That’s how they build character.
Still Teaching at 85: Wojcicki at Penn State’s 2026 Commencement
This spring, Wojcicki delivered the commencement address at Penn State’s College of Information Sciences and Technology — speaking to graduates entering an AI-reshaped job market and a world moving faster than any curriculum anticipated. Her message echoed what she has told students for decades: the preparation that matters isn’t a perfect transcript. It’s the habit of thinking independently, built early and practiced often.
The Mother’s Day Takeaway
Flowers and brunch are nice. But the real gift mothers give isn’t something you can wrap. It’s the belief they hold about their kids — that they are capable, that their voice matters, and that failure is something you can survive.
Woj is the author of How to Raise Successful People: Simple Lessons for Radical Results and Global Moonshots in Education. She is the founder of WOJ Education and creator of the ParentingTRICK app.
