Country for PR: Australia
Contributor: Medianet International
Friday, May 08 2020 - 12:36
AsiaNet
Aussie Startup Offers Guilt-free Time to Locked Down Parents
SYDNEY, May 8, 2020/Medianet International-AsiaNet/--

Working parents around the world are united in the struggle to juggle keeping 
their young children entertained and learning whilst trying to meet the 
deadlines and demands of their own paid employment.  

 Even the most creative and diligent parents are suffering cognitive overload 
and burnout due to the intensity of trying to meet the continual demands of 
children yearning to learn.  It seems an impossible and time-taxing task, 
driving parents to continually seek new activities to stave off boredom.

 In an ironic twist, the current lockdown saw Aussie start-up Prosper 
Education's own staff wondering what to do with their children while they 
juggled work and childcare duties.  Being app developers, staff resorted to 
handing over test devices to keep their kids busy while they worked, even 
though the apps were originally designed for ESL teachers to use in schools.  
Interestingly, much to their surprise, especially being native English 
speakers, the apps that were originally made for classroom teachers kept their 
young children busy for hours, and consistently over weeks.

 This inspired the team to create the Prosper Education Home App specifically 
to let parents gain back valuable guilt-free time without having to think about 
what they are going to do with their kids.  

 According to Prosper Education's CEO, Genevieve Gilmore, mother of four, 
teacher and founding member of Mathletics (ASX: 3PL) the current lockdown 
environment has shown parents just how hard it is to manage their children's 
time and education from home. "It's a happy accident that our original content 
designed for ESL students actually works really well with native speakers.  The 
research suggests that native language learning and second language learning 
differs however we've found that for this age group they seem to be learning 
similarly."

 Ben Rawson in the UK said, "Max is only 3 but if it's not Peppa Pig, it's 
Prosper's 'The Learning Game' he wants to play - at first I was just using it 
so I can distract him so I can get on with work, but now I've realised he's 
actually been learning new words - I tell people I'm Father of the Year."

To find out more www.prospereducation.com

About Prosper Education

Prosper Education apps are developed in Sydney and UK by a small and passionate 
team of educators, animators and technologists.  We love surprising and 
delighting our young users around the world.  

 Photo: 
https://app.salesforceiq.com/r?target=5eb4b40fc9e77c00781e08ea&t=AFwhZf30JI3JONnezxt0wvNmT6opQ42lwzz0VAzibjAqCsHHzxduiNFazmA_rVaUyF6xzL3D07f7FqoTm5hHkX_ouNjk00EFqBX92WSkZtuelQ4dLJc8yIxsjaCKJF0w0PIIcIIbV-gt&url=https%3A%2F%2Froyalabc.com%2Fwp-content%2Fuploads%2Fimages%2FIMG_20200421_133741.jpg


SOURCE: Prosper Education