The monthly math and
reading assessment
your child takes at home.
Built for parents, not schools. In eight minutes, you'll know whether your child is approaching, meeting, or exceeding grade level, and exactly what to practice next.
Engine
The difficulty adapts after every answer.
Get a question right and the next one gets harder. Miss it and the next one gets easier. Eight minutes is enough to pinpoint exactly where your child stands.
Topics
Mastery, down to the smallest detail.
Fractions, place value, geometry, word problems — each scored separately. So you know exactly which subjects need more work.
Trajectory
One chart that tells the whole story.
Watch your child's grade level rise month over month. Catches it early when they start falling behind, and confirms when they're pulling ahead.
1The assessment
Eight minutes. Ten questions. Genuinely fun.
Adaptive engine raises and lowers difficulty in real time. Kids enjoy it. Parents trust it. Calibrated to NWEA and iReady so the score actually means something.
A bag has 12 marbles. ¼ are blue. How many?
2The report
The most useful score sheet you've ever read.
Grade level, performance band, mastery by topic, and a list of concrete practice ideas — all generated within seconds. Calibrated to the same NWEA and iReady benchmarks the schools use, so the score actually means something.
3Every month
Your kid will ask when the next test is.
It's actually fun for kids — without sacrificing rigor. So you're not negotiating or bribing. They'll ask when the next one is, which means you reliably get a monthly data point and an effortless way to track progress.
Emma's collection · April
The dinner-table report card.
“My daughter literally asks if she can take the test. The badges hooked her, the trajectory chart hooked me.”
“We pay for Russian Math. Now I can actually see whether it's making a difference, month over month.”
“Before this, my only data point was the once-a-year standardized test, and even that didn't tell me much. Now I get a granular read every month, and I actually know what to do with it.”