Parents

Help your student build smart study habits

See study hours, topics covered, and confidence labels at a glance—so you can guide your child’s routine from the earliest grades through high school.

Last updated: Feb 2, 2026

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What you can see

View daily and weekly study hours with a calendar heatmap—perfect for spotting streaks and lighter days.

Tip: Celebrate streaks, but protect rest days to avoid burnout.

Each session is tied to a course outline. You can see which topics are getting attention and which are not.

Tip: Before exams, scan the outline for red/untouched topics and plan short review blocks.

Insights are deterministic and show a confidence indicator. High confidence means patterns (like peak hours) are based on enough data.

Tip: Encourage more logged sessions to raise confidence before relying on a pattern.

Students can jot notes during a session. Reviewing them together helps you see what clicked and what needs re-teaching.

How to set it up with your child

1) Create courses and outlines together

Paste the syllabus or list topics manually. Clear outlines make coverage and goals accurate.

Guide: Course outlines · FAQ: Valid outline format

2) Set a target date

Add exam dates or goals so topic goals calculate correctly. Confidence improves as sessions accumulate.

FAQ: How topic goals are calculated

3) Encourage short, honest sessions

Short, truthful timers (with focus ratings) build better Insights than long, inconsistent sessions.

4) Review together weekly

Look at heatmap, topic coverage, and notes every Sunday; choose 2–3 topics for the coming week.

Privacy & control

Deterministic, not AI

Insights do not guess; they compute patterns only from your child’s logged sessions.

Account control

Data stays with the student’s account. You can request deletion anytime from Settings; it completes in 7 days unless the student logs back in.

Appropriate use

EstudyLog is designed for students; parents should set up and guide younger kids. Encourage honest logging over surveillance.

Sample routines by age

Grades 3–5

10–20 minute blocks, 1–2 topics per day, focus on building the habit and short notes.

Middle school

20–35 minutes, mix Reading + Practice, start tracking peak hours and confidence labels.

High school

45–60 minutes, deliberate practice for tough topics, weekly outline gap checks, grade calculator for finals.

Always balance study with rest; younger students benefit most from consistency over intensity.

Need a walkthrough? Read the How it works guide or email [email protected].

For real-world wins, check working parent and AP/IB stories.