Every Sunday, parents get a digest summarizing the week's sessions. At a glance it's just numbers and streaks — but each section is designed to answer a specific question.

The mastery breakdown shows which topics moved from 'developing' to 'proficient' this week, and which ones are stuck. A topic that's been stuck for more than two weeks is usually a sign it's worth a conversation, not just more practice.

The 'top struggle area' section is written in plain language on purpose. Instead of 'negative exponent simplification', you'll see something like 'why a number with a negative exponent gets smaller' — because that's the actual conceptual gap, and it's something you can ask about without needing to know the math yourself.

That's the idea behind the suggested dinner-table question. It's not a quiz. It's an invitation for your kid to explain something in their own words — which, as it turns out, is one of the best ways to consolidate learning.

If you only read one section each week, make it that one.