See where each child is —
not just where the curriculum
says they should be.
Learning Curve shows you the active developmental windows across Body, Mind, and Heart for every child — drawn from 49 frameworks across 10+ countries. So you can see what's biologically alive in each child right now.
What curriculum can't tell you
These aren't failures of teaching. They're structural gaps between curriculum pacing and biological reality.
Why a child who reads fluently still struggles with writing
Reading and writing are neurologically distinct. A child can decode words fluently while their fine motor system or working memory is still maturing. Curriculum treats them as one skill. Developmental biology does not.
Why some children resist sitting still in Year 1
Sensory integration and proprioceptive development are active windows at 4-6 years. Many children require movement to regulate their nervous system — not because they're disruptive, but because their biology says so.
Why group instruction misses children at opposite ends of the same window
A developmental window for a milestone can span 18-36 months. Two children in the same class can both be within the biological norm while one is just entering the window and the other is exiting it. A single pacing guide can't serve both.
Developmental window view
See which milestones are biologically active for each child right now — across Body, Mind, and Heart. Not a checklist of what they should have done, but a window of what is most alive in their development today.
- Active milestones highlighted per child
- Windows drawn from 49 frameworks, 10+ countries
- Separate Body / Mind / Heart tracks
Developmental window view
Grounded in 49 frameworks · 10+ countries
Activity recommendations
2,076 researched activities mapped to developmental windows. When you know which milestones are active for a child, Learning Curve surfaces the activities that support those windows — play, movement, language, creative work.
- 2,076 activities across all domains
- Mapped to specific developmental windows
- Suitable for home and classroom settings
Activity recommendations
Grounded in 49 frameworks · 10+ countries
Parent connection
When parents and teachers can see the same developmental picture, they stop working from different assumptions. Share what's active in a child's development so the home environment and the classroom can reinforce the same windows.
- Shared developmental view with parents
- No clinical language on parent surfaces
- Sync observations across home and school
Parent connection
Grounded in 49 frameworks · 10+ countries
Observation logging
What you see in the classroom is evidence. Learning Curve lets you log observations against specific developmental milestones — so a child's profile grows from real moments, not just formal assessments.
- Log observations against milestones
- Builds a longitudinal developmental record
- Informs next steps without extra admin
Observation logging
Grounded in 49 frameworks · 10+ countries
49
developmental frameworks
10+
countries represented
2,076
mapped activities
205
canonical milestones
From teachers who use it
I've been teaching Reception for eleven years. What Learning Curve gave me was language — a way to explain to parents why their child needs more outdoor time, more messy play, more movement. It's not 'they're behind', it's 'this window is active and here's what feeds it'. That shift changes the whole conversation.
Reception class teacher
State primary school, South East England
We were trying to understand why a handful of our kindergarteners were struggling with fine motor work that their peers managed easily. Looking at the developmental windows, it was obvious — those children were simply earlier in a window that spans nearly three years. We adjusted our expectations and the tension evaporated.
Kindergarten lead
Independent early learning center, Pacific Northwest
Start with one child.
See the difference.
No training required. Enter a child's birthday and see their active developmental windows in under a minute.
Get started