made to be handed to a child
everything a young learner sees here is calm and age-appropriate: short lines about school, family, pets, and everyday things, with no ads, no chat, no pop-ups, and nothing to click away before starting. there is nothing to sign up for, so a parent or teacher can open it and step away without handing over a child's name or email.
how the lessons build
the fifteen-lesson course starts on the home row — the middle row where the fingers rest — and adds two or three keys at a time, the same order a classroom keyboarding unit uses. accuracy comes before speed, so a child builds correct finger habits instead of fast hunting-and-pecking. these curated lines are extra practice on real, readable sentences.
safe on school networks
there are no accounts, no advertising, and no third-party tracking, and all progress stays on the device. that makes it straightforward for a school to allow: nothing about a student's typing or choices is sent anywhere. if a district needs the site whitelisted or wants documentation for a privacy review, the notes for schools cover it.
what you'll type
- a quiet cat sleeps on the windowsill all afternoon.
- we built a small fort with blankets and pillows.
- soft rain on the roof sounds like quiet drumming.
- my friend lent me her favorite book on monday.
- green buds appeared on the apple tree this week.
- sandwiches and water bottles went into the picnic bag.
- my brother taught me how to fold a paper boat.
- a puppy chases its tail in slow, lazy circles.
- quiet songs filled the room during music class.
- we drew the planets and labeled each one carefully.
- reading together is more fun than reading alone.
- wind moved the leaves in a way that felt friendly.
- under the big tree, we counted the clouds.
- squirrels darted across the yard before sunset.
- the library is quiet, and the chairs are soft.
questions
what typing speed should a child have?
it varies a lot by age and practice. as a rough guide, many elementary students type around 10 to 15 words per minute, middle-schoolers 20 to 30, and high-schoolers 35 to 45. accuracy matters more than speed at every age — build correct finger habits first and speed follows.
is it safe for kids and school networks?
yes. there are no ads, no accounts, no chat, and no tracking, and nothing a child types leaves the device. there is no content other students can see and nothing posted publicly.
what age is it for?
any age learning to touch type. the calm tone and short, readable lines suit younger students, and the same lessons work for older kids and adults. a hardware keyboard helps — touch typing is hard to practice on a touchscreen.