SchoolHouse
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Pre-K through 8th grade · 30+ subjects

School they'll ask to do.

One platform replaces the curriculum juggle — interactive lessons, real pedagogy, and a dashboard that shows you exactly what's working.

We onboard a new group of families each month so feedback stays personal.

Learning feels like an adventure

Kids follow interactive quest maps through every subject — unlocking lessons, battling bosses, and earning XP. The world grows with them.

A friendly SchoolHouse character holding a book.
A SchoolHouse character celebrating with arms raised.
A SchoolHouse character pointing at the quest map.
Ages 12-14 quest map
Ages 12-14
Ages 9-11 quest map
Ages 9-11
Ages 5-8 quest map
Ages 5-8
A friendly SchoolHouse character reading a book.
A SchoolHouse character celebrating with arms raised.
A SchoolHouse character pointing at the quest map.
A SchoolHouse quest map with a glowing trail.
0Interactive lessons
0Subjects
0Grades, Pre-K–8

The problem

Homeschooling is hard enough.

The curriculum juggle

A different program for every subject, none of them talking to each other, all of them on your kitchen table.

Getting them to want to

Worksheets win the morning battle and lose the war. Motivation runs out by Wednesday.

"Are they actually learning?"

You're the teacher, the principal, and the record-keeper — with no clear read on what's sticking.

How it works

Built on how kids actually learn.

We borrowed the best techniques from a century of pedagogy and the last decade of cognitive science — and built them into one system.

Story-driven lessons

Ideas arrive as narration and retelling, with copywork woven into stories worth reading — not drills stripped of meaning.

Math that builds understanding

Bar models, number bonds, and worked examples so the "why" lands before the "how" — concrete before abstract.

Memory that lasts

Spaced recall and retrieval practice bring old ideas back at the right moment, so learning sticks instead of fading.

Motivation built in

Quest maps, XP, and boss battles turn mastery checks into something kids chase — progress without test anxiety.

Inside the product

The part the kids fall for.

Most-loved feature

The sibling business simulator

Kids run a real little economy together — pricing, inventory, customers, profit. A daily lesson unlocks each turn, so math and decision-making happen because they want to win, not because a worksheet said so. Nothing else on the market does this.

The SchoolHouse business simulator: a shop dashboard with inventory, pricing, and customer activity.
Progress, mapped

Quest maps

Every subject is a journey across a hand-drawn map. Kids see exactly where they've been and what's next — the lesson plan, reimagined as an adventure.

A SchoolHouse quest map screen showing completed and upcoming lesson nodes along a path.
Mastery checks

Boss battles

End-of-unit reviews become a boss to beat. It's a test that doesn't feel like one — recall practice the kids actually ask to retry.

A SchoolHouse boss battle screen used as an end-of-unit mastery review.
Real lessons

Interactive lessons

Reading, questions, copywork, and hands-on activities — taught, not just quizzed. Built for independence where it fits and parent-led time where it counts.

A SchoolHouse interactive lesson page with a teaching passage and questions.

For parents

Finally, a straight answer.

See time on task, mastery, and what needs another pass — per kid, per subject, at a glance.

Emma · Grade 4

This week
Level 7 · 1,240 XP
Math86%
Reading92%
Science74%
Fractions41%

Sample data shown for illustration. Fractions is flagged for review — the dashboard surfaces it before it becomes a gap.

Why we built this

I'm a homeschooling dad of four. We started SchoolHouse because our own kitchen table was buried under a different program for every subject — one for math, another for reading, a stack of printables — and none of them told me whether any of it was sticking.

I wanted lessons my kids would actually want to open, built on real teaching methods, with a dashboard that told me the truth about what they'd learned. So I built it, tested every lesson on my own four, and kept only the parts that worked. It's the platform I wished existed when we started.

Roger Johnson — Founder & homeschool parent of four

Practical answers

The questions you're actually asking.

How much screen time per day?

Most days land around 20–40 minutes. Lessons are designed to be done and closed, not endlessly scrolled, and much of the early-grade work is read-aloud and hands-on, off the screen.

Does it meet my state's requirements?

SchoolHouse keeps a record of completed lessons, time on task, and mastery you can export for a portfolio or attendance log. We don't file paperwork with your state, but we give you the records most states ask families to keep.

Can I see the full scope & sequence?

A printable scope & sequence for every grade is on the way. In the meantime, each subject lists its topics in order right inside the app, so you can see exactly what a year covers before you commit.

What's my role as the parent?

It scales with age. In Pre-K–2 you're reading aloud and sitting alongside; the platform does the planning and keeps the place. By grades 3–5 kids drive most lessons themselves with you checking in. By 6–8 it's largely independent, and your job shifts to the dashboard — spotting what needs another pass.

What will it cost after beta?

It's free during the beta, with no credit card. When we launch, founding families lock in $12/month for as long as you stay subscribed.

Everything in one place

30+ subjects, Pre-K through 8.

Core

MathLanguage ArtsReadingScienceHistory

Languages

SpanishFrenchMandarinGreekRussianUkrainianHawaiian

Enrichment

Coding & Computational ThinkingMusicArt & DesignDrama & Performing ArtsGeographyHumanitiesLogic & Critical ThinkingMaker Skills & EngineeringLiteratureAI & Technology

Life skills

Life SkillsHealth & AnatomyPhysical EducationTyping & Digital SkillsEmotional IntelligenceMedia & Information LiteracyStewardship & EnvironmentStudy Skills

High school (9–12) coming soon.

Start here

They'll ask to do school. Yes, really.

Free during beta. No credit card. $12/month for founding families when we launch.