In the contemporary era, people frequently assume that parenting and professional mentoring are separate domains. However, human biological development requires a continuous, unified learning environment. Modern educational and internship models suffer from a fundamental structural flaw: the separation between the learner and the mentor is artificial, temporary, and lacks natural emotional investment. This causes severe psychological fragmentation in early childhood and catastrophic graduate unemployment globally. This comprehensive research paper merges two critical phases of the Parental Internship Module (PIM) within the Alam Educational Framework (AEF). Phase One focuses on early childhood (ages 0–7), establishing parents as the primary formal educators. Phase Two addresses the global internship crisis by proposing that parents, guardians, or nominated mentors serve as primary professional internship supervisors for young adults. By leveraging biological bonds, natural work hierarchies, and unmatched parental dedication, the PIM provides a lifelong solution to skill mismatch, the forgetting curve, and global unemployment.
Syed Aftab Alam (Tue,) studied this question.