aitutors.me gives every household two front doors into the same account. You sign in to a parent dashboard — progress, subjects, rewards, billing and data. Your child signs in to their own learner home at /study — their tutor, their goals, their Heddy points. One subscription, two purpose-built views. And whenever you want, you can preview your child's learner home read-only, to see exactly what they see.

Most family software makes you choose. Either it's built for you and your child borrows your screen, or it's built for your child and you're locked out of the detail. We didn't want either. A tutoring account is a shared thing: you're paying for it and keeping a caring eye on progress, and your child is the one doing the actual learning. So the account has two views, each shaped for the person in front of it.

Why one account has two views

You and your child are looking for different things. You want the arc — is she settling in, is the week too heavy, which subjects are moving. Your child wants a space that feels like theirs: somewhere to open the tutor, chase a goal, and watch their points climb, without a spreadsheet staring back at them.

Trying to serve both from one screen makes a mess for everyone. So the "parent view" and the "child view" are genuinely separate places. You reach yours by signing in with your usual email link. Your child reaches theirs with their own login — a username and a password you set up. It's still one subscription and one household; it's just two doors.

What you see: the parent dashboard

Your dashboard is the household's control room. A left-hand panel gives you one clean page per job:

  • Overview — the at-a-glance home: a card per child showing this week's energy, points and a button straight into the tutor, plus anything waiting for you.
  • Children — your roster, where you add a child and manage each one's login.
  • Progress — sessions, the weekly energy trend, and what each child is getting stronger at.
  • Personality — what the tutors have noticed about how each child learns, and their Learning Genius report.
  • Rewards — each child's Heddy points, and the place you approve reward requests.
  • Subjects — which subjects each child studies.
  • Connection, Billing, Ask Heddy and Data & privacy — set-up, your subscription, help, and everything about your family's data.

It's the whole picture, per child, with nothing hidden. For a fuller tour, see Your Family Dashboard, at a Glance.

What your child sees: the learner home

Your child's learner home is deliberately smaller and friendlier. When they sign in they land on a "Ready to learn?" hero — one tap into a session — and a short panel of their own:

  • My Learning — the tutor itself: Mentor and the subject professors, in their own private threads.
  • My Genius — their Learning Genius, in kid-friendly language.
  • Heddy Points — their balance, how they earned it, and the Emporium of rewards they can ask to claim.
  • My Goals — the goals they're working towards.
  • My Reports — a gentle, kid-voiced read of their own progress.

Notice what isn't there. No billing. No subscription buttons. No settings that could break something. No sibling's data. And no leaderboards — a child's learner home shows their journey, never a ranking against anyone else.

Job You see it on the parent dashboard Your child sees it on the learner home
Open the tutor A button per child from Overview The big "Start a session" hero
Progress Full sessions, energy trend, mastery A gentle "nice steady week" summary
Heddy points Balance, history, approve requests Balance, history, ask to claim
Subjects Choose them, per child Simply appear as their tutor's rooms
Billing & data Yours to manage Not shown at all
Other children All of them Only ever themselves

See exactly what your child sees

You don't have to guess — and you don't have to read over their shoulder. From the Children page you can preview a child's learner home, read-only. You see the exact layout they see, without being able to change anything or spend their points. It's the transparent middle ground between "I have no idea what this looks like for them" and hovering while they work. If it looks right to you, you can hand them their login with confidence.

How you move between the two

On a shared family device, switching is quick and safe. Your account chip in the top corner has a "Your learners" section — tap a child and it opens their sign-in, where they type their own password. It never drops them straight into a live session from your tap; the password is always required. To come back to the parent side, the child chip offers "Switch to a parent", which opens the parent sign-in — so a child can never wander into your dashboard without you authenticating.

Younger children often just use the tutor on your screen while you're nearby; older ones sign into their own learner home. Both are fine, and the account supports either. If you're weighing that up, Passwords, Lockouts and Peace of Mind walks through the safety side.

FAQ

Does my child see my billing or subscription details?

No. A signed-in child only ever reaches their own learner home at /study — their tutor, goals and points. Billing, subscription, data settings and every other child's information live on the parent dashboard, which a child login cannot open at all.

Can I see exactly what my child sees on their screen?

Yes. From the Children page on your dashboard you can preview a child's learner home read-only — the same layout they see, without changing anything. It's the honest way to check the experience without reading over their shoulder.

Do my child and I use the same login?

You don't have to. You sign in with your own email magic link; your child can have their own username and password that opens only their learner home. Same subscription, two separate front doors.


Duke Harewood built aitutors.me for his own KS3-aged daughter, and wanted a version she'd feel was hers without losing sight of how she was doing. Two views, one account, was the answer. Updated 09 July 2026.