Wright

If your kid is doing Kumon

While your kid did Kumon this month, other 12-year-olds shipped software in their own name.

Kumon is not nothing. It builds a real habit and real fundamentals. But at the end of the month it ends in another stack of worksheets, and there is no point your kid can stand at and say, I made that. Meanwhile some 12-year-olds spent the same weeks shipping a real, working product with their name on it. That gap is small at 12 and it does not close on its own. Start by watching your kid do the real first module, free.

Start with the free Module 1

Free, no card, no login. Then the $29 First Build Kit if your kid wants to build the real thing.

What another month of Kumon never gives them

Kumon drills, and the drilling has real value. But the output is always the same shape: completed pages, a level moved up, a folder that goes in a drawer. There is nothing at the end your kid can hand to a stranger, nothing live, nothing with their name on it that does a real job for a real person.

The kids who pull ahead at this age are not necessarily smarter. They are the ones who, somewhere around 12 or 13, shipped one real thing in their own name and learned that they could. That experience changes what a kid believes is possible for them, and it compounds. The gap it opens is small at first. By 22 it is the difference between someone who has shipped and someone who is still waiting for permission.

Wright is built to put your kid on the shipped side of that line: one real, working product, chosen and built by them, live at a web address that is theirs, this season instead of someday.

Compare them the honest way, on the real material

Do not switch anything on a sales pitch. Look at the actual work and decide. The free Module 1 is the real first module of Wright, with no login and no card, written so your kid can work straight through it at home this week, alongside whatever else is on the plan.

By the end they have shipped their first real artifact: a one-paragraph idea brief naming a real person, a real problem, and the small thing your kid could build to fix it. Hold that next to a week of worksheets and judge for yourself which one your kid will still be able to point at in a year. The honest way to compare is to watch your kid do the work, free, first.

Do the free Module 1

No card, no login. Your kid ships their first idea brief.

When your kid is ready to build · $29 · one time · no subscription

What the First Build Kit is

After the free Module 1, the First Build Kit is the next two modules, unlocked the moment you pay, lifetime access. Self-paced, no live calls, no schedule to keep. Your kid turns the idea brief they just wrote into a real, working product, live at a web address a stranger can open on their own phone and actually use, this weekend.

Module 2 · Coach Lin · Lock the offer

Your kid takes the loose idea from Module 1 and turns it into a one-page offer card a stranger could actually pay for: the product name, the one real customer, what it does, what it deliberately does not do, and the price. Coach Lin is the strictest coach in the program and will not pass a fuzzy offer through. They walk out with a real file, offer_card.md, that decides exactly what gets built next.

Module 3 · Coach Mark · Build the working version

This is the weekend where it becomes real. Coach Mark helps your kid pick the right AI build tool for their specific product and push it just past the point where it works. The deliverable is not a slide or a mockup. It is a live, public URL where the thing their offer card promised actually happens, end to end, for a stranger, on a phone, without your kid in the room. They save it in mvp_url.md, and it is theirs.

What they walk away holding

  • A locked, one-page offer for a real product with a real first customer.
  • A live, working web address a stranger can open and use, that passes a thirty-second can-you-use-this-without-help test.
  • Lifetime access to both modules, so they can run the play again on a second idea.
  • The two parent guides, so you know exactly what to look at and what to ask, without doing the work for them.
Get the First Build Kit, $29

Instant access to Modules 2 and 3. One time. Full refund if nothing real ships.

The full Wright program is $397 a month. Most families start with one weekend instead.

What twenty-nine dollars is sitting next to

Kumon, every month

  • Worksheets, indefinitely
  • $150 or more a month, per subject
  • Nothing your kid can point at

An Outschool class

  • A few live sessions on a screen
  • A topic, then it ends
  • Nothing live at the end

A one-week coding camp

  • $400 to $1,200
  • A certificate
  • Forgotten by Tuesday

The First Build Kit

  • $29, one time
  • One weekend, at home
  • A real working tool, live at a URL, theirs to keep

The point is not that Wright is cheaper. It is that the cheaper thing here is the one that ends with a real product a stranger can open. Twenty-nine dollars buys a result, not a calendar of sessions.

Before you decide, here is one real build I can point to directly.

My own younger brother is one of the kids who has been through Wright. He shipped a real tool that connects to a student's Canvas and shows them what is due, all in one place, and it is live.

I watched him do it. He is the one I name, because he is family and I can speak to it directly. The other kids stay private, because they are minors and that is their families' call, not mine to put on display. One real product I can vouch for, from someone I know, is what I lead with.

The refund, in plain words

You are paying for a result, not a login. If your kid works through these two modules and does not end up with something real and working that you can open, reply to your receipt and I send back all twenty-nine dollars. No form, no window to miss, no questions about why. The risk here is mine, not yours.

After your kid has a live product, there is an honest path further, the $89 Launch Pack and then the $397 a month membership, each crediting what you already paid, but none of that is the deal today. Today is the free Module 1, and then twenty-nine dollars and a working tool.

The honest first step is free. Sit your kid down with the real Module 1, watch them ship their first idea brief, and judge it. The $29 build weekend is right there when they are ready.

Start with the free Module 1

No card, no login. Your kid ships their first idea brief.

Already convinced? Get the First Build Kit, $29, or see exactly what is in the kit.

Ibrahim
Founder, Wright · wright.school