How Parents Can Use Nachiketa to Support Their Child's Learning
A practical guide for parents — track progress, set up practice routines, and help your child build real mastery without the stress.
You want to help your child do well in school. But between tuition fees, exam stress, and the mountain of YouTube "shortcuts," it's hard to know what actually works.
Nachiketa is built to give parents clarity — not more confusion. Here's how you can use it to make a real difference at home.
1. Start with What Your Child Actually Struggles With
Most parents sign up for platforms and hand the phone to their child. That rarely works.
Instead, sit with your child for the first session. Pick a subject and topic they find difficult — say, fractions in Class 6 or trigonometry in Class 10. Let them attempt 10 quiz questions while you watch.
You'll immediately see:
- Which concepts they understand
- Where they're guessing
- How their SmartScore responds to right and wrong answers
This first session tells you more than a report card ever will.
2. Use SmartScore as Your Progress Report
Every topic your child practises on Nachiketa has a SmartScore — a mastery rating from 0 to 100 that adapts in real-time. Unlike exam marks, SmartScore penalises guessing and rewards consistent understanding.
Here's what the numbers mean:
| SmartScore | What It Tells You |
|---|---|
| 0–30 | Just starting — needs concept explanation first |
| 30–60 | Understands the basics but makes frequent errors |
| 60–80 | Solid grasp — occasional mistakes under pressure |
| 80–100 | Mastery achieved — ready to move on |
Check SmartScores weekly. If a score isn't climbing, the issue isn't practice volume — it's a gap in understanding. That's when you step in with a conversation or get help from a teacher.
3. Set Up a Daily Practice Routine
Consistency matters more than duration. A 15-minute daily session is far more effective than a 2-hour weekend marathon.
A simple routine that works:
- Pick one topic for the week (e.g., Linear Equations)
- 10 quiz questions daily — takes about 10–15 minutes
- Review mistakes together on the weekend
- Move to the next topic once SmartScore crosses 80
This approach builds the habit of learning, not just the habit of studying.
4. Use Concept Lessons Before Practice
If your child scores below 30 on a topic, jumping into more quiz questions won't help. They need to understand the concept first.
Nachiketa's Learn section has structured lessons for each topic — clear explanations, worked examples, and for subjects like Maths, interactive visualizations that let your child see what's happening.
The right sequence is always: Learn → Practice → Master.
Skipping the "Learn" step is the most common mistake parents and students make.
5. Don't Chase Marks — Chase Understanding
It's tempting to focus on how many questions your child got right. Resist that urge.
What matters more:
- Are they attempting harder questions over time? The quiz adapts — harder questions mean they're improving.
- Are they making the same mistake twice? If yes, there's a concept gap. If no, they're learning.
- Is SmartScore trending upward over weeks? A slow, steady climb is better than a spike followed by a drop.
Your role as a parent isn't to solve the questions for them. It's to notice patterns and ask the right questions: "What did you find hard today?" is worth more than "How many did you get right?"
6. Use Worksheets for Offline Practice
Not every study session needs a screen. Nachiketa offers downloadable PDF worksheets that match what your child is learning online.
Print a worksheet, hand it over with a pencil, and let them work through it at the dining table. This is especially useful for:
- Younger children (Classes 3–6) who benefit from writing by hand
- Exam preparation where pen-and-paper speed matters
- Screen-free evenings
The worksheets align with the same topics and difficulty levels as the online quizzes, so progress stays connected.
7. Stay Involved Without Hovering
The goal is to support your child's learning, not to micromanage it. Here's a healthy balance:
- Daily: Ask what topic they practised (1 minute)
- Weekly: Look at SmartScores together and celebrate progress (10 minutes)
- Monthly: Review which subjects need more attention and adjust the routine
As your child builds consistency, you'll naturally step back. That's the point — Nachiketa is designed to build independent learners, not dependent ones.
The best thing a parent can do is show up consistently. Not with answers, but with attention. Fifteen minutes of genuine interest in your child's learning journey is worth more than any tuition class.
Start today. Pick one topic. Sit together. The rest follows.