From first words to first job — pick your stage
Learn 50+ food words with audio pronunciation, colorful pictures, and interactive games. Perfect for building first vocabulary.
Play-based counting, shapes, patterns, and basic operations. 100+ interactive activities designed for early learners.
Logic grids, tangrams, patterns, and spatial reasoning. Not maths, yet deeply mathematical. Perfect for ages 3+ with parent guidance.
Learn concepts of big/small, tall/short, more/less through interactive comparisons and visual games.
Learn heavy/light concepts through fun comparisons — animals, food, vehicles. 250+ pairs, surprise rounds!
Practice real Hindi-English dialogues — college, restaurants, markets, hospitals. Hear both languages, read grammar notes, build speaking confidence.
Match emotions, recognize patterns, and build emotional intelligence through fun interactive puzzles.
Explore musical notes, create melodies, and develop auditory skills with an easy-to-use virtual piano.
Understand directionality and quantity comparison through playful interactive exercises.
Classic tales retold for ages 4-6, building character values like honesty, kindness, and bravery through storytelling.
Philosophical concepts made simple through engaging stories. Introduce deeper thinking in age-appropriate ways.
For ages 3-5: max 1 hour daily of high-quality interactive content with co-viewing. Ages 6-7: up to 1.5 hours. Always prioritize activities that require your participation—ask questions, pause to discuss, and connect learning to real life.
No. Attention spans at this age are naturally short (3-5 min for 3yo, 8-15 min for 6-7yo). Design learning in micro-bursts. Movement is learning at this stage—don't force sitting. Use physical games, role-play, and interactive cards instead of passive content.
No formal instruction needed before age 5. Focus on play-based literacy (rhymes, stories, letter recognition through games) and number sense (counting objects, patterns, sizes). Pressure before developmental readiness creates anxiety and resistance. Follow their curiosity.
Look for: basic self-care (bathroom, eating independently), ability to follow 2-3 step instructions, 15-20 min focus on activities they enjoy, comfort separating from you for short periods, basic social skills (sharing, turn-taking). Age is less important than these readiness markers.
Developmental timelines vary hugely at this age (±18 months is normal). Early academic achievement doesn't predict later success. Focus on: curiosity, persistence, emotional regulation, and love of learning. These predict long-term outcomes better than early reading or counting.
Strong native language foundation (ages 0-5) makes learning additional languages easier. Prioritize native language for emotional connection and concept development. Introduce English naturally through songs, stories, play—not drills. Bilingualism is an asset, not a compromise.
Start research 12-18 months before target admission. But don't "prep" your child with tutoring or drills. Schools value: communication, curiosity, following instructions, and social comfort. These develop through play, not coaching. Over-prepping often backfires—kids appear scripted, not natural.
If you're finishing this stage, here's what changes next:
Complete curriculum-aligned content for Math, Science, English, Hindi, Social Studies. Interactive lessons, practice questions, and concept explanations.
Master sentence structure, parts of speech, tenses, clauses, and punctuation. 400+ exercises with instant feedback and detailed explanations.
100+ chapters covering fractions, decimals, geometry, word problems, and algebra basics. Progress from Grade 1 through Grade 8 at your own pace.
Start building college-ready vocabulary early. 7,300 words with mnemonics, etymology, and usage examples. Perfect for ages 11+.
Develop reasoning, logic, and analytical skills through interactive challenges. Cover patterns, sequences, cause-effect, and problem-solving frameworks.
Master order of operations with step-by-step visual animations. Understand why BODMAS rules matter through interactive problem-solving.
Learn grammar through interactive coding-style games. Identify nouns, verbs, adjectives in real sentences while building pattern recognition.
Discover how your body works through interactive anatomy lessons. Learn about organs, systems, and health signals your body sends.
Explore a single word in 20,000+ words of depth. Understand meaning, context, culture, and usage across 100+ dimensions. Model for vocabulary mastery.
Provide structure, not solutions. Help them organize tasks, break problems into steps, and check work—but let them struggle productively. Ages 8-10: sit nearby for support. Ages 11-13: transition to independence with check-ins. Doing their work creates dependence and hides learning gaps.
"Boring" often means "I don't see the point" or "it feels too hard." Connect math to their interests (sports stats, gaming scores, cooking measurements). Use visual/interactive tools instead of repetitive worksheets. Celebrate problem-solving process, not just correct answers.
Only if there's a specific gap or interest. Overscheduling creates burnout. Ages 8-13 need: unstructured play, hobbies, boredom (builds creativity), and family time. One structured activity (sport/music/art) is enough. Academic coaching is useful only if school support isn't sufficient.
Ages 8-10: 1-1.5 hrs recreational screen time daily. Ages 11-13: up to 2 hrs. No social media before age 13 (per platform policies). Focus on content quality and balance—screens after homework, outdoor play, and family meals. Use parental controls and co-view content regularly.
Not yet—but start exposure. Age 11+ can explore "What do people do?" through career conversations, job site visits, and linking school subjects to real-world work. Avoid pressure or narrowing options. Goal: broaden their view of possibilities, not pick a path.
Talk first, don't punish. Common causes: social issues (bullying, friendships), learning gaps, emotional stress, or developmental changes. Meet with teachers to understand context. Address root cause (tutor for gaps, counselor for emotional issues) rather than focusing only on grades.
Ask "why" and "how" constantly. Encourage them to explain their reasoning, predict outcomes, and evaluate options. Use puzzles, strategy games, and real-life decisions (budgeting allowance, planning family trips). Our L² Thinking Lab is designed specifically for this developmental stage.
Here's what changes as you enter high school:
Complete board exam preparation for Science, Commerce, and Humanities streams. Chapter-wise content, practice questions, previous years, and exam strategies.
Master mechanics, electricity, optics, thermodynamics, waves through interactive simulations. Aligned with CBSE, ICSE, JEE Main, and NEET syllabi.
Class 12 Business Studies deep-dive: Planning, Organizing, Staffing, Directing, Controlling. Real-world examples and case study practice.
Complete SAT verbal preparation with 72K word explorer. Mnemonics, roots, etymology, and contextual usage for college-ready communication.
Connect school subjects to real careers. Explore STEM, Humanities, Arts, Commerce, and Vocational tracks. Understand job roles, skills needed, and pathways.
Discover the intersection of what you love, what you're good at, what the world needs, and what pays. Interactive framework for meaningful career choices.
Master reasoning frameworks, decision-making strategies, and analytical thinking. Essential for interviews, entrance exams, and professional life.
Higher-order thinking challenges for teens. Complex patterns, abstract reasoning, and multi-step problem-solving across 400+ interactive cards.
Navigate dating, friendships, and communication. Learn red flags, healthy boundaries, emotional intelligence, and relationship patterns. Ages 16+.
Understand how minds work, why people behave as they do, and develop emotional intelligence. Foundation concepts in accessible language.
Timeline: Age 14-15 (Class 10) | At Stake: Subject specialization influencing college options
Consider: (1) What subjects do you naturally enjoy? (2) What are your genuine strengths? (3) What career directions interest you (even vaguely)? Avoid choosing based on peer pressure, parent expectations, or "job security" myths. Use our Career Explorer to see paths from each stream. Switching is possible, but earlier clarity helps.
Ages 14-19 are peak social connection years—phones meet real developmental needs. Set boundaries collaboratively: no phones during meals/study hours, apps that track screen time, discuss online safety openly. Replace "phone ban" with "better alternatives"—sports, hobbies, friend meetups. Power struggles backfire; boundaries with respect work.
Not for everyone. Tuition helps if: (1) school teaching quality is poor, (2) student has specific gaps, or (3) they need structured accountability. Self-study with quality resources (like our CBSE modules) works for self-motivated students. Coaching culture creates dependency—build learning autonomy instead.
Start early (age 14-15), keep conversations open and judgment-free. Discuss: healthy vs. unhealthy relationship patterns, consent, emotional boundaries, and how relationships affect studies/goals. Our Relationship Lab (ages 16+) covers these topics. Avoiding the topic doesn't prevent relationships—it prevents informed decisions.
No. These exams require 2-3 years of intense, specialized prep. Without genuine interest, it's painful and often unsuccessful. Better: explore career options first (use our Career Explorer), then commit to relevant entrance exams. Keeping options open by suffering through JEE creates burnout, not opportunity.
Validate their feelings—pressure is real. Help them separate: things they control (effort, preparation) vs. things they don't (exam difficulty, cutoffs). Break overwhelming futures into "next steps." Professional counseling is valuable if anxiety affects sleep, appetite, or daily function. Success has many paths—one "bad" result isn't a life sentence.
Ideal timing: Age 14-15 (before stream selection) and Age 17-18 (before college/career decisions). Good counseling includes: aptitude/interest assessments, exposure to diverse careers (not just doctor/engineer/MBA), understanding of education pathways, and exploring the student's values—not just parent/societal expectations.
Here's what changes as you transition to professional life:
Machine learning and deep learning concepts for beginners. Understand neural networks, algorithms, data science basics. No coding required to start.
Master Adobe (Photoshop, Acrobat), Salesforce, Python, GitHub, Claude AI. Hands-on tutorials with real-world workflows. Build portfolio-ready skills.
Essential technical writing skill for documentation, GitHub, blogs, and professional communication. Learn formatting, structure, and best practices.
2,000+ roles with detailed job descriptions, required skills, salary ranges, and growth paths. Filter by education level, interest, and industry.
Professional reasoning frameworks for job interviews, case studies, and workplace problem-solving. Practice structured thinking and articulation.
Learn to work with advanced AI systems. Prompt engineering, reflective interaction, and metacognitive AI use for professional tasks.
Explore civilizational wisdom through proverbs from around the world. Build cultural intelligence and systems thinking for global professional life.
Philosophical grounding for professional challenges. Explore dharma, karma, purpose, and ethical decision-making through ancient wisdom.
Distinguish "wrong fit" from "normal difficulty." Ask: (1) Do I hate the subject or just find it hard? (2) Can I see myself working in this field in 5 years? (3) Have I explored what jobs actually exist in this domain? Switching is okay—1-2 years "lost" is better than a lifetime of regret—but understand why first.
Matters for campus placements and first job applications (many companies have cutoffs). Matters less for subsequent roles—skills, projects, and experience become more important. If your GPA is low, compensate with: internships, certifications, portfolio projects, and demonstrable skills. No one asks about GPA after 2-3 years of work experience.
If you have no work experience, do 1-2 internships (even unpaid/low-paid for 3-6 months). They provide: (1) real-world skills, (2) resume credibility, (3) professional network, and (4) clarity on what you actually like. Internship→job is easier than no-experience→job, especially in competitive fields.
Universal skills: (1) GenAI tools (ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini)—prompt engineering and workflow integration, (2) Basic data literacy (Excel/Sheets, visualization), (3) Collaboration tools (Slack, Notion, GitHub), (4) Domain-specific software (Adobe for design, Salesforce for business, Python for tech). Learn tools used in your target jobs.
Practical steps: (1) Connect with alumni from your college working in your field, (2) Attend industry events/webinars and follow up with speakers, (3) Join professional communities (LinkedIn groups, Discord servers, local meetups), (4) Offer value first—share insights, help others, contribute—before asking for favors. Quality > quantity.
Build a "proof of work" portfolio: (1) Personal projects (websites, apps, case studies, designs), (2) Freelance/volunteer work, (3) Certifications in relevant tools, (4) Blog/content showing your thinking. Use GitHub, Behance, Medium, or a personal website. Show initiative and learning ability—employers hire potential, not just experience.
If you've been job hunting for 6+ months with no offers, take the first reasonable one—any work experience is better than extended unemployment. If you have options, evaluate: (1) Learning opportunities (mentorship, skill development), (2) Industry/company reputation, (3) Growth potential. First job sets trajectory but doesn't lock your future—most people switch within 2 years.
After your first job, continue your lifelong learning journey through specialized portals: