What being 'a frum mom' means to this platform.
Spoiler: it doesn't mean the product is only for Jewish families. It means the product was designed by someone who knows what it's like to be the underserved minority on every other platform.
I get asked this a lot: 'Is the platform only for religious families?'
No. But I want to tell you the truth about why I built it the way I did.
I'm frum. That means Orthodox Jewish. It means we keep Shabbos, keep kosher, the kids learn Hebrew and Chumash and Mishna alongside math and reading. It means I've spent a decade on platforms that treated 'religious content' as a niche bolt-on — usually a single dropdown labeled 'add faith-based supplement' with three options, none of which fit.
Every homeschool platform I've used has felt like it was built for a generic suburban family with two kids and no specific beliefs. Catholic families feel this. Muslim families feel this. Christian families feel this. So do secular families with strong opinions about what their kids read.
If you've been the family with the asterisk — the one who needs to filter out something or add something or skip something — you know what I'm talking about.
So when I built this, the question wasn't 'how do I make a frum-friendly version of a generic platform.' The question was: 'how do I build a platform where every family is the default?'
That's why every agent can be configured per family. That's why the curriculum library starts with what fits YOUR worldview, not the generic average. That's why religious-text vetting (Chumash with Rashi, Catechism, Quran with Tafsir) is a Phase 1 feature, not a Phase 4 'nice to have.'
Frum families will love this platform. Catholic families will love it. Muslim families will love it. Secular families will love it. The reason is the same: it doesn't treat your worldview like a footnote.