Sound familiar?
You come home from work. Your phone shows a notification from the school system: your child got bad grades and didn't do their homework. The tutor calls — same story. Time for another "serious talk."
You've tried different approaches:
Total game ban
Your child doesn't live in a vacuum. Their classmates play games. They start playing at friends' houses behind your back. Conflicts arise: "Why can everyone else play but not me?"
Unlimited gaming
Your child disappears into the virtual world. Grades collapse. No time left for anything.
The "adult" approach: play as much as you want while grades are good
Sounds reasonable. But in practice, the child does the bare minimum, quality drops, you end up banning games anyway, and motivation evaporates.
Manual bonus/penalty tracking
It works! But you have to keep records, calculate balances, track play time. The moment you ease up — loopholes appear. Plus, you get guilted: "That's not fair," "The task was too hard." Emotional rollercoaster every day.
Sound familiar? Same here.
What if someone who can't be argued with was keeping track?
Learning Hub is an AI tutor that lives in your child's messenger. It works on a simple principle: game time is a currency earned through studying.
The child quickly learns: arguing with AI is pointless. The tutor never gets tired, doesn't fall for guilt trips, never forgets penalties. The system works 24/7 — and the child starts optimizing their studies to earn more game time.
From one parent's memoir:
We first tested this idea with Duolingo. My son was 7, and I told him: one crown = 30 minutes of gaming. He thought it was easy money. A couple days later, the tasks got harder and the "easy money" was gone — but he kept going. A year later, he'd completed all of Duolingo, logging more hours of English than his school would give in 8 years. Then I let him watch YouTube in English for free — and he stopped watching videos in his native language on his own: "English ones are more interesting." That's when I knew: a bonus/penalty system works. It just needs to scale to all of school.
How it works
For the child — a tutor in their messenger
Your child chats with an AI tutor via Telegram (or another messenger). The tutor:
- Reminds about homework — "You have a math deadline tomorrow"
- Checks homework — the child sends their solution, the tutor gives feedback
- Assigns bonus tasks — to review weak topics and earn game minutes
- Never gives ready answers — uses the Socratic method, teaches thinking
- Shows balance — "You have 45 minutes. Here's what you earned and lost"
The child can't cheat the system: content is filtered, ready answers aren't given, balance is calculated automatically.
For the parent — autopilot
You set the rules once. Then the system runs itself:
- Grades sync automatically from the school system (EduPage, PRONOTE, and others)
- Bad grades — automatic alert to you or the tutor via Telegram
- Weekly report — how much earned, how much spent, current balance
- Weak topics are tracked — the system suggests review tasks to the child
- Homework is monitored — deadlines, reminders, completion tracking
You stay a "detached observer." The system of checks and balances works without your involvement.
Features
Automatic grade tracking
Syncs with school platforms and automatically converts grades to game minutes. Supports school systems from 20 countries — from Czech Republic and France to Japan and India.
Adaptive bonus tasks
Got a bad grade? The system suggests a review task on that topic. Difficulty adapts: from simple 5-minute questions to serious 20-minute problems.
Textbook library
Upload your child's textbooks — the tutor uses them when checking homework and creating bonus tasks. Material is always on curriculum.
Homework control
Automatic reminders 2 days and 1 day before the deadline. The child can submit work to the tutor — who checks it and gives feedback. Bonus for on-time, penalty for overdue.
Problem escalation
Bad grade automatically goes to the tutor or parent. No need to check the grade book daily — the system will tell you if something went wrong.
Content safety
Age-appropriate link and content filtering. Social media, harmful content, and "brainrot" videos are blocked. Educational resources only.
Multiple schools at once
Child attends two schools? In different countries? The system supports multiple schools, subjects, and tutors simultaneously.
Game minutes — universal currency
Minutes are an abstraction. You and your child decide what they convert to: game time, pocket money, a bicycle, whatever. The system tracks the balance.
Get started
Install OpenClaw
Learning Hub runs as a plugin for OpenClaw — an open-source AI assistant. You'll need a server (any old computer works) and a Telegram account.
Send the install command
Copy one command and send it to the bot. It will install Learning Hub and walk you through setup.
Configure in 10 minutes
The bot will ask: which school, what subjects, who are the tutors, what language. Connect EduPage or another school system — grades start syncing automatically.
Give your child the Telegram bot
The child starts chatting with the tutor. The system is live.