actually,
actually,

Something to point to when someone asks what they're learning

Log what happened. See patterns. Generate a report when you need it.

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You need to show what they're learning

For reviews. For the doubters. For the part of your brain that panics at 2am.

You're not giving up on education. You're choosing what's best for your child. You still need records that hold up—and something that captures the learning that doesn't fit on a worksheet.

How it works

  1. Log what happened today. Reading, building, talking, existing. When it happens, if you want.
  2. See patterns over time. One place. By focus area. No filing.
  3. Generate a report when you need it. For reviews, for yourself, or when someone asks.

Without something in one place

You're scrambling when someone asks. The doubt has nothing to answer to. Your nervous system holds it all instead.

With actually

  • One place to put it.
  • Patterns you can see.
  • A report when you need it.
  • Nothing mandatory. No streaks, no scores, no "you're behind."

Start today. No credit card required. You can stop anytime.

Try for free →

What it looks like

Log a moment: what happened, focus areas, photos

Log what happened. Tag focus areas. Add photos if you have them.

See learning over time in one place

See learning over time. All in one place.

Generate a report across seven areas of focus

Generate a report. Seven areas of focus. Ready when you need it.

Built by a parent who needed it. No school place. SEN home education. Tried spreadsheets and school-style apps—nothing fit. So this: track real learning, the kind that happens in conversation and play. In beta. Used by parents who need proof without turning home into school.

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