In contemporary childhood development discourse, holistic parenting has emerged as a multidimensional framework addressing children’s physical health, emotional intelligence, intellectual growth, and spiritual awareness. Yet, many models lack a cohesive ethical backbone to guide everyday practices. Jainism’s Shravakācāra—its code of conduct for householders—articulates five interrelated vows (Ahimsa, Satya, Asteya, Brahmacharya, Aparigraha) that foster nonviolence, honesty, respect, moderation, and nonattachment. This paper presents an examination of how Shravakācāra can enrich holistic parenting. Through a comprehensive literature review, conceptual mapping, and synthesis of developmental psychology and moral education research, we propose an operational framework for translating each vow into practical strategies. Anticipated benefits include enhanced emotional regulation, moral internalization, social responsibility, self-control, and inner contentment. We also address cultural adaptation, parental modeling, and progress measurement. Finally, guidelines are offered for parents, educators, and family counselors to integrate Jain ethical wisdom into daily routines and community contexts.