From “something’s wrong” to a plan — in your first 48 hours
No waiting lists. No clinical offices. No guesswork about what to do at home. Here’s exactly what happens from the moment you start your free trial — day by day, then minute by minute.
The first two weeks
Day by day, from start to plan
You start the free trial
Two minutes to sign up. You get immediate access to everything — all three programs, every bonus module, and the assessment platform. Nothing is held back for “premium” tiers, because there’s only one tier.
You complete the assessment
Five guided questionnaires about what you see at home — academics, processing patterns, attention, emotional factors, and environment. You answer at your own pace, spread over a day or two if you like, on your phone or laptop.
Notice who’s missing from this step: your child. There’s no test for them to get anxious about, no stranger’s office, no performance. You already hold the observations that matter — the assessment knows how to read them.
The Learning Roadmap arrives
Our AI analyzes your answers across 440+ data points and seven processing systems, and our team personally reviews the result. What lands in your inbox is your child’s Learning Roadmap: which systems are strong, which need building, why previous approaches didn’t stick, and a 12-week plan — which programs, in which order, on a simple daily schedule.
Not a label. A map. And it’s yours to keep even if you cancel the trial.
The daily 15 minutes
You open the day’s plan, and it tells you exactly which short exercises to do with your child — with the words to say and the order to do things in. Sessions run 5–15 minutes and end on a win, before boredom or frustration set in.
The system adapts, and so does your inbox
As you mark progress, recommendations adjust to how your child is responding. Coaching emails explain what to do next and why. You’re never left wondering “is this working?” or “what now?” — the plan updates as your child grows.
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Anatomy of a session
What 15 minutes actually looks like
Here’s a typical session at the kitchen table — no prep, no printing, no lesson planning.
Open today’s plan
The day’s exercises are queued and ready. You read a one-line setup — what you’re doing and what to say. That’s your full preparation.
Do the exercises together
Short, focused drills matched to your child’s Roadmap — an eye-tracking exercise, a listening game, a phonics burst. You’re the coach: the script hands you the exact prompts and encouragement, so you’re never guessing what to say when your child hesitates.
End on a win
Sessions are built to close on success — a completed round, a beaten personal best, a “that was hard and you kept trying!” Difficulty is tuned so your child finishes feeling capable, not drained.
Mark it done
One tap logs the session. Progress feeds the system, the system tunes tomorrow, and you’re finished — before the pasta water boils.
No hour-long sessions. No handing your child a tablet and hoping. No points, badges, or cartoon rewards — the win at the end and your proud face are the reward system, and they’re the only one that builds real motivation.
Our daughter had better focus in less than three days… she would ask for the exercises before she had to read or wanted to write.
A week in real life
Built for actual family life
Fifteen minutes is the target, not a rule that breaks the system. Some families do sessions before school, some after snack, some split them — a five-minute listening game in the car, ten minutes at the table before dinner. Many exercises are simple offline drills, so this isn’t more screen time in a house that’s already fighting screens.
And when Tuesday explodes and the session doesn’t happen? You pick up Wednesday where you left off. Consistency over weeks is what rewires a brain — not perfection over days. The plan bends around your life instead of demanding your life bend around it.
Your role
You’re the coach. We’re the coaching staff.
The sessions happen with you — not because we couldn’t build another child-alone-with-a-screen app, but because your involvement is the active ingredient. A parent’s attention and approval move a child’s motivation more than any digital reward, and the home environment is now formally recognized in the IDA’s 2025 definition as a factor in how learning differences play out.
You don’t need training, teaching experience, or an understanding of the neuroscience. The system translates everything into the words to say and the steps to take, in the moment you need them.
- Plan a lesson
- Diagnose anything
- Know why an exercise works (though we’ll tell you, if you’re curious)
- Push a frustrated child — sessions end before frustration starts
- Guess whether it’s working — progress is visible week over week
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Over 12 weeks
The 12-week arc
Every child’s Roadmap — and pace — is their own. Here’s the shape of it that parents most often describe.
Early weeks
The daily rhythm forms. Focus during sessions improves, resistance softens, and many children start asking for the exercises. The wins are small and frequent — by design.
Middle weeks
Skills start showing up outside the sessions: smoother reading, steadier attention on homework, instructions followed the first time. The Roadmap shifts emphasis as early gaps close.
By week 12
The foundations the Roadmap targeted are measurably stronger, and your child has something no program hands out directly: a run of weeks proving to them that hard things yield to effort. Most families roll into the next cycle with an updated plan.
The first step takes two minutes. The first answer takes 48 hours.
You’ve spent months — perhaps years — wondering what’s actually going on. Two days from now, you could be holding the Learning Roadmap that explains it, with a plan that starts the same week.
$0 today · Roadmap within 48 hours · Keep it even if you cancel
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