The education system was built for a world that no longer exists. These are the principles we built Learnspace on.

AI Is a Tool, Not a Crutch

Most schools ban AI. We teach kids to use it. They learn when to ask AI for help, when to think for themselves, and how to tell the difference. The kids who understand AI will build the future. The rest will watch.

Real Languages, Not Toy Blocks

No drag-and-drop. No visual puzzles pretending to be programming. Our students write real JavaScript — the same language behind the apps they use every day. The gap between learning and doing disappears.

Struggle Is the Point

We don't make things easy. We make them possible. Every lesson is designed so your child has to think before they type. The AI tutor gives hints, not answers. Confidence comes from solving hard problems, not avoiding them.

Understanding Over Memorization

We never ask kids to memorize syntax. We ask them to figure out why something works. A child who understands the logic can look up the syntax. A child who memorized the syntax is stuck the moment the problem changes.

Build Things That Actually Work

Our students build websites, apps, and games that run in real browsers. Not simulations. Not sandboxes. Software they can share with friends and family. If they can't show it to someone, it doesn't count.

Learn How to Learn

The languages we teach today won't be the languages of 2040. That's fine. We're teaching kids how to teach themselves — how to read documentation, debug their own mistakes, and figure things out without being told the answer.

More Than Coding

Coding is the headline, not the whole story. Math challenges build number confidence. Logic puzzles sharpen reasoning. Typing builds fluency. Chess builds patience. The coding teaches them to build. Everything else teaches them to think.

Progress They Can See

Every lesson completed, every puzzle solved, every skill earned — tracked and visible. Parents see exactly where their child is and how far they've come. Kids see their own growth. Neither has to guess.

One lesson is usually all it takes. Let them try it and see for themselves.

Start their first lesson

$10/week. Cancel anytime. No questions asked.