The family dashboard is your household's home base. The moment you sign in, you see a card for each child — how their week has gone, their energy, their Learning Genius, their level and points — and a single side-panel that reaches every control you'll ever need: Progress, Personality, Data, Subjects, Rewards, Children and the Learning plan. No hunting through menus, no separate logins per child. One page that answers the question every parent actually asks: how is everyone doing?

If you've ever tried to keep track of two or three children's learning across school apps, homework diaries and half-remembered conversations, the appeal of a single at-a-glance view will be obvious. This is that view.

The overview: a card per child

The first thing you land on is the household overview. Each child gets their own card, and each card is a small, honest snapshot:

  • Energy — a green / amber / red pill, so you can see at a glance whether this has been a full-tilt week or a recovery one (more on that in the weekly check-in).
  • Learning Genius — their animal type, so you're reminded how this child learns before you read anything else.
  • Level and points — where they sit on the seven-owl ladder and their current points balance.
  • The week — how many sessions they've done, and a way straight into the tutor for that child.

One subscription covers everyone in the house, so adding a second or third child doesn't mean a second bill or a second account — it just adds a card. We go into that in one subscription, every child.

The side-panel: seven doors, one place

Down the side sits the panel that makes the dashboard a control room rather than just a display. Each door goes somewhere specific:

Panel What it's for
Progress This week's sessions, streaks and the longer arc of how a child is doing
Personality Each child's Learning Genius and what it means for how you support them
Data What we store, and your controls over it — the transparency layer
Subjects Which subjects each child studies (you choose, per child)
Rewards The reward shop, and the approvals waiting for your yes or no
Children Add a child, set up their login, and preview what they see
Learning plan The term focus and the bigger plan for each child

The design goal is that nothing about your household is more than one panel away. You don't need to remember where a setting lives; you scan the panel and it's there.

The child switcher: stay in one world, then flip

Here's the small feature that makes a multi-child household workable. When you pick a child, the dashboard stays on that child as you move around. Open Progress, then Subjects, then Rewards — you're still looking at the same child the whole way through. When you're done, you switch to the next child and the panels re-point.

That means you can do a proper five-minute check on one child — read their progress, glance at their subjects, clear a reward request — without the view jumping between children and losing your thread. Each child's progress, points and subjects are genuinely their own; the switcher just decides whose world you're currently standing in.

What you control here — and what you don't

The dashboard is the parent's surface. It's where you:

What you don't do here is be your child. Your child signs into their own kid-friendly learner home — with their goals, their points, and the tutor — never billing, never a sibling's data. If you want to see exactly what they see, you can preview their learner home read-only from the Children panel. We unpack that split in two views, one account.

Reading it in five minutes a week

You don't need to live in the dashboard. A good rhythm for a busy parent:

  1. Glance at the cards. Any red energy pills? Anyone who hasn't done a session all week? That's your radar.
  2. Clear the reward requests. A quick yes or no keeps your child motivated and keeps you in control.
  3. Follow up on one thing. Pick the child whose card gives you pause and open their Progress panel. Depth on one child beats a shallow scan of all three.

The whole point of an at-a-glance dashboard is that the glance is usually enough — and it tells you where the five minutes of attention should go. And because it all works as an app on your phone (see AI Tutors on your phone), that glance can happen on the school run.

FAQ

What does the family dashboard show me?

A card for each child in your household — their energy, Learning Genius, level and points, and how their week has gone — plus a side-panel that reaches Progress, Personality, Data, Subjects, Rewards, Children and the Learning plan. It's the parent's at-a-glance home base.

Can I see all my children in one place?

Yes. One subscription covers every child, and the dashboard shows a card per child on the overview. A child switcher lets you drill into one child's progress, subjects or rewards without losing your place.

Does my child see the same dashboard?

No. You sign into the parent dashboard; each child signs into their own kid-friendly learner home. You can preview a child's learner home read-only to see exactly what they see, but the dashboard's controls are yours alone.


Duke Harewood built aitutors.me for his own KS3-aged daughter, and then found himself wanting the same at-a-glance view he'd have wanted as any parent of more than one child. Updated 09 July 2026.