Just 10 minutes a day
to help your child improve their English scores
Aligned with curriculum and textbook vocabulary, combining scientific memory review with real-life practice so your child's English truly sticks.
Aligned with curriculum and textbook content
All three are essential for better English scores
What you learn, whether you remember it, and whether you can use it — these determine whether what you've studied translates into test scores.
Content · Right Material
Aligned with curriculum and textbook vocabulary, practicing what exams actually test.
Memory · Retain It
Based on the Ebbinghaus forgetting curve, automatically bringing content back for review when your child is about to forget.
Method · Apply It
Through real-life dialogue, training listening comprehension, recall, complete expression, and cross-context usage.
Higher Scores
Learn the right content, remember it, and apply it — that's how English becomes exam-ready.
Content × Memory × Method = Score
Turn textbook knowledge into real English ability
No aimless chatting. Every practice session revolves around your child's current grade, textbook unit, and core sentence patterns.
This Week's Core Vocabulary
Understand the Question First
Start from familiar life scenarios so practice doesn't feel like a pop quiz.
Encourage Willing Responses
Children can start with keywords — the agent judges whether they truly understand.
Guide Toward Complete Expression
Provide just enough sentence scaffolding to turn recognition into speaking.
Apply in a New Context
Only when they can use it across different questions and contexts does it become exam-ready.
Help your child recall at the moment they're about to forget
Forgetting isn't carelessness — it's how the brain naturally works
Ebbinghaus's research revealed: newly learned content, if not reused, typically declines quickly at first, then more gradually.
- 1Words just learned appear again sooner.
- 2Already familiar words have gradually longer review intervals.
- 3Each review uses a different question or life scenario to avoid rote memorization.
More than just speaking practice — build complete English ability
Vocabulary
Not just memorizing definitions — understanding how words enter sentences.
Listening
Getting familiar with keywords, speed, and sentence patterns in real questions.
Reading
Easier understanding of sentence structure, context, and real-world usage.
Writing
Building expressions ready for essays and exam answers.
Grammar
Encountering rules repeatedly in real sentences so they're no longer just memorized.
Listening, speaking, reading, and writing reinforce each other — English scores grow naturally.
What school is teaching
is what your child practices today
Parents don't just see 'how long their child chatted with AI' — they see which textbook content their child actually mastered today.
Just 10 minutes a day to make learned English truly stick
What you learn, whether you remember it, and whether you can use it — these determine whether what you've studied translates into test scores.