26/07/2025
Why Your Child Hates Homework and School
Parents often complain: «I donât know how to make my child do their homework. They just donât want to.»
Why this happens and how to deal with itâread on in our slides.
If you want to give your child the chance to explore the IT field, bring them to a trial lesson. Itâs free and doesnât commit you to anything.
Link to the first free lesson
26/07/2025
When do you think a child should be praised? Should it be when theyâve reached the goal or when theyâre making an effort, even if the goal hasnât been achieved yet?
For example, a child aimed to score 100 points on a math test. They studied hard but only got 70.
đ â Praise the child for their effort. Itâs important to keep them motivated so they donât feel like they canât succeed and give up. Positive reinforcement for small steps is essential.
đ â Praise only for results. Otherwise, the child might lose sight of the goal halfway. Itâs important to maintain high standards so they find ways to achieve them. If praised during the process, the child may think that results arenât necessary: «Why try harder if Iâm already doing well?»
â â Neither of these, Iâll share my own opinion in the comments.
26/07/2025
Beware, this post contains lots of cute kids and scary robots.
This post is a personal story from Vova Kornigor, the founder of the school. He shared a story that began when he was 7 years old, explaining why he created RTS.
What Vova is doing to ensure that future technologies like ChatGPT, self-service machines, or quantum computers wonât scare kids: Read, absorb, and get inspired.
And sign up for a free lesson at the school â if you want, of course. Still unsure? Well, a robot might eat you. Just kidding, it wonât.
26/07/2025
By the way, donât mind the overworked SMM manager. Sheâs dug up essential recommendations from child neuropsychologists and turned them into life hacks written in simple language. Practical, with examples of what to do and what not to do. Parents can start using them with their kids right away. Go check out the cards!
If you find the life hacks helpful, share them with other parents. Letâs put an end to homework struggles!
26/07/2025
Weâve brought you a case study from Mom Alena. Her son Mark, 9 years old, is studying on the Minecraft course. We thought her review might help you make a decision if youâre considering joining us.
26/07/2025
Do you ever catch yourself raising your child the same way you were raised â even though you swore youâd never do it?
You want to be patient, but when your child is being stubborn, you hear that familiar voice in your head: «How many times do I have to repeat myself?!», «If you keep acting like this, youâre not going anywhere!»
And then you realize â those arenât your words. Thatâs what was said to you.
Even when we know itâs not the best approach, we still repeat familiar patterns from our childhood.
But is there another way?
The first step is to recognize the moment when youâre reacting on autopilot. The second is to do the opposite. Stop and look at the situation differently.
For example, your child spills juice. Frustration kicks in, and you think, «I just cleaned the floor!»
Try shifting from reaction to solution. Take a pause and ask, «How can we fix this?» Maybe, «What should we do? Do we need a napkin?»
This way, your child learns to find solutions, and you keep your peace of mind. When kids know they wonât be punished but helped, they learn faster and become more independent.
Many children come to their first lesson afraid of making mistakes. We show them that learning can be different.
If the first code doesnât work, we analyze and fix it. If a design isnât quite right, we refine and try again.
After class, kids leave with a spark of confidence in their abilities. To sign up for a lesson, follow the link in our profile.
26/07/2025
Thereâs one subtle reason why a child might seem uninterested in anything.
Check this list:
1. The child always has a cartoon or tablet on.
2. Thereâs always someone nearby entertaining them.
3. As soon as everything is turned off, they say: «Iâm bored».
4. Sometimes the child gets fussy, canât just sit or wait calmly.
They often ask, «Can I have the phone?»
If this sounds like your child â they might be missing something important: boredom. It may sound odd, but in order for a child to develop their own drive to create, explore, or do something â they need time alone with themselves.
At first, it might look like poking at the dirt with a stick or wandering aimlessly around the room. But gradually, thoughts begin to form:
«What do I want?»
«What can I do?»
«What interests me?»
Hereâs how to start:
â Introduce one hour a day of «doing nothing»: no gadgets, no toys, no cartoons.
â Let the child decide what to do. Donât offer ready-made ideas.
â Set an example: sit nearby with a book, without your phone.
Follow for more insights on parenting and child development
26/07/2025
Some kids spend hours just zoning out and wasting time â while others invest that time in their development.
Did you know that Minecraft and Roblox have everything needed for your child to actually learn?
â Learn to code
â Develop logic and systems thinking
â Create their own worlds and storylines
Many adults are only starting to learn how to code. But kids? They often learn faster than grown-ups:
â An adult might spend months learning HTML.
â A child can create a mini-game in Roblox in one evening. Not because theyâre a genius â just because theyâre interested.
This way, kids build a strong foundation in programming without even realizing it. They get into something useful and start unlocking their talents.
One child watches YouTubers play games. Another is already writing mods, scripts, building maps, and launching their own games. Thereâs a fine line between âplayingâ and âcreating.â
Your child is going to love games no matter what. The real question is: will they just be chasing skins, or will they be learning to think, solve problems, and build their own worlds?
And hereâs a fact few people know: most modern game developers started out⊠by creating Minecraft mods.
Itâs more than just a game. Itâs hands-on practice in algorithms, logic, and systems thinking. And it all happens without pressure â no âcome on, studyâ â just curiosity, excitement, and the freedom to explore.
26/07/2025
And you donât feel guilty :) You know whatâs tricky about ordinary clubs? You think youâre dropping your kid off. You think youâre freeing up 2 hours.
But in reality:
Drive them there.
Wait in the car.
Stop by for a notebook, pencils, brushes.
Drive back.
And at the end, hear: âMom, did you forget I need a costume for the play?â
đ And thatâs it. Your âtwo hours for yourselfâ are gone.
đ§âđ» With programming, itâs different.
No driving. Your child learns online, from home. Theyâre at the laptop, youâre watching your show. No traffic, no lines, no errands.
Everythingâs ready. You donât need to buy anything. No hunting down printouts, glue sticks, or costumes. The teacher sets it all up and explains everything.
Your kid does it all by themselves. You donât sit next to them giving hints. Theyâre not calling for you every 5 minutes.
âïž Independence is a skill that gives you more than just peace and quiet.
They develop a sense of agency: they feel they can handle things without mom.
Their confidence grows â the project works, and they did it.
And theyâre not afraid of mistakes. Because in programming, a mistake is part of the process â not a reason for yelling or bad grades.
đ€ And thatâs real bliss. For them and for you.