Study Buddy engages kids aged 9–14 with school subjects through gamified tasks, progress tracking, and achievements
Most educational apps miss the mark. They're either too dull, too generic, or leave parents completely out of the loop.
Kids quickly lose motivation when learning involves dry repetition. Without fun or rewards, studying becomes something to avoid rather than embrace, leading to frustration for the entire family.
When kids can't see their progress, they disengage. Without visible milestones, each session feels like starting from scratch, making the effort seem useless.
Most apps fail to provide parents with meaningful insights. You're left wondering if your child is truly learning or just tapping screens without making progress.
Study Buddy merges gamification, personalization, and parental visibility into a cohesive learning experience.
Choose the subjects that matter most right now — Math, Science, English, History, and more. Children aren't confined to one area; they follow what they're actually studying in school.
Inform the app about your current class topics. Study Buddy asks a few simple questions and tailors its content to align with your real school subjects from day one.
Short, focused practice sessions centered around what you're studying in class. Just 10–15 minutes a day keeps knowledge fresh and transforms studying into a consistent habit.
Watch understanding develop with each session. Children progress gradually through school-related material — steady, structured learning rather than random, forgettable practice.
Earn points, maintain streaks, and unlock achievements as you learn. Parents have a dedicated viewer to track progress clearly — supporting the family without disrupting the child's flow.
Built by parental control experts and parents who believe every family deserves simple, powerful protection — without complexity or compromise.
Study Buddy engages kids aged 9–14 with school subjects through gamified tasks, progress tracking, and achievements, while giving parents insights into their child's progress.