Homeschool organization that grows with your family
Track daily tasks, log hours, build portfolios, manage curriculum, and turn cooking into cross-curricular learning — all in one place.
Start Free Browse all site types →What this academy site does
Start from the type of site you actually need, then turn on the pieces that fit the way your academy works.
Give people one clear place to understand the academy, find the next event or resource, and take the next useful step.
Use the tools that make sense for students: calendars, files, messages, tasks, resources, updates, RSVPs, or shared records.
The first questions fit this site type, so your academy starts with the right pages, tools, and wording.
What your first site can include
Your first site can make the next lesson, assignment, class date, supply need, or resource easy to find. Parents, students, teachers, and co-op leaders should not have to dig through several apps to know what comes next.
Your first setup
- Start with daily tasks, learning records, portfolio entries, curriculum notes, and shared family schedules.
- Create grade or learner sections before adding large resource libraries.
- Use the vault for records that should not live in email threads.
- Add one weekly review routine so progress stays visible.
What the site makes clear
Someone opening the site should understand the learning model, who participates, what gets shared, and where the next assignment, meeting, class, or resource will appear.
- Portfolio and record structure
- Learner-specific task organization
- Family schedule integration
- Privacy around academic records
The site is not an empty shell after signup. It opens with the tools that match this type of academy and can be adjusted during onboarding.
Daily lessons, assignments, practice work, and household learning routines in one board.
Lessons, co-op days, field trips, appointments, and recurring study blocks.
Books, links, resources, experiments, recipes, and materials organized by subject.
Notes, photos, reflections, and project updates captured as the year unfolds.
Start free for the first real class, family, or co-op workflow. Upgrade later if the site needs more storage, a public domain, additional admin control, or larger shared-resource libraries.
Sound familiar?
These are the moments that usually mean a dedicated academy site will help.
Learning records scatter
Curriculum notes, reading lists, hours, projects, and portfolio proof can end up in too many places.
Daily rhythm changes fast
Lessons, chores, activities, appointments, and co-op days need one calm view for the week.
Portfolios take too much catch-up
It is easier to capture work as it happens than rebuild the year from memory later.
Everything your academy needs
One private website. No ads. No data mining. You own your data.
Learning Tasks
Daily lessons, assignments, practice work, and household learning routines in one board.
Learning Schedule
Lessons, co-op days, field trips, appointments, and recurring study blocks.
Curriculum Library
Books, links, resources, experiments, recipes, and materials organized by subject.
Learning Journal
Notes, photos, reflections, and project updates captured as the year unfolds.
Academic Records
Attendance notes, portfolio items, documents, and private records for parent review.
Learning Games
Quizzes, challenges, and activities that make review feel less like busywork.
Up and running in minutes
No credit card. No setup fees. No catch.
Pick your type
30 seconds. Tell us your academy name.
Add your people
Invite students with a link or email.
Start with the right tools
Your starter pages and selected tools are ready when the site opens.
Simple pricing
A calmer homeschool week starts with one place.
Start Free
- Learning tasks
- Learning schedule
- Curriculum library
- Learning journal
- Academic records
- Learning games
- Student roles
- 500 MB storage
Questions?
Does it handle state reporting?
It can help collect schedules, notes, attendance, and portfolio material. Requirements vary, so families should still follow their local rules.
Can kids have their own logins?
Yes. Students can have age-appropriate access while parents keep control of records and settings.
Can we use it with a co-op?
Yes. Use this for one family, or choose the homeschool co-op type when several families need shared class coordination.
