For parents

Know what your child learned today.

A clear digest at the end of each school day: what was learned, what is due, and one good question to ask at dinner.

Built from your child's actual classes · Approved by the teacher

6:15 PM Taday
Emma Liam

Grade 6 · 4 classes today

Emma’s class added fractions with unlike denominators.

Homework: page 42, questions 1–15 — due Friday.

Ask tonight: why do fractions need a common denominator?

Reminder set for Thursday
Approved by Ms. Rivera

One calm read per child. Every evening.

"What did you do at school today?" "Nothing."

It is not that nothing happened. It is that nobody handed the day to you in a form you could use. Here is how that evening goes once Taday is in the picture.

  1. 3:04 PM

    The post exists — somewhere.

    "Math worksheet due Friday" is real information, if you happen to check the right app at the right moment. Most evenings, nobody does.

  2. 6:15 PM

    The digest arrives.

    One message per child: what was learned in each class, what is due, and what deserves attention tonight. Five minutes, in plain language.

  3. 7:30 PM

    Homework, without the standoff.

    You already know it is page 42, questions 1–15 — and you have a question that opens the conversation instead of closing it.

  4. Sunday · 5:00 PM

    The week, in one story.

    A weekly recap of what each class covered, what is coming next, and where your child might need a hand before it becomes a grade.

Less checking. More knowing.

One digest per child

Every class, one calm message. No feeds to scroll, no group chats to mute, no app-hopping between subjects.

Reminders that arrive in time

Homework reminders come before the due date, not as a surprise after it. Tests and quizzes show up days ahead.

Help that fits the lesson

Each digest ends with one good question to ask tonight — written from what the class actually did today.

"Is this just another app to check?"

No — it checks in with you. One digest at a predictable time, one recap on Sundays, and reminders only when something is actually due. If the class had a quiet day, the digest is short. There are no ads, no feeds, and nothing to scroll. Every word was approved by your child's teacher before it reached you.

Want this at your school?

Taday comes to families through schools. Tell your school about the 30-day pilot — or send us their name and we will make the introduction gently.