AyaQuest for madrasahs.
Why teachers use AyaQuest
Most madrasahs teach recitation and memorization well. What's harder to do in a 60-minute weekly class is meaning — the story under the surah, why this verse matters to a 7-year-old, what to say at bedtime when a child asks the obvious question. AyaQuest is built for that gap. A 10-minute lesson opens the meaning. Aya answers the wondering. The parent dashboard closes the loop at home.
How AyaQuest fits in a classroom
- Opener (10 min): assign the surah lesson before class, then start the session with what your students noticed in the story.
- Closer (10 min): end class with a Walk-with-Aya bedtime version of the surah the kids recited that day.
- Homework anchor: kids do the lesson at home, parents see the conversation in the dashboard, parents arrive at the next class already in the loop.
- Make-up tool: a child who misses a Saturday session can catch up via the lesson and quiz at home.
What's safe for the classroom
Aya is bounded to a curated library of Quran stories and mainstream tafsir. It does not browse the open web, does not depict the Prophet ﷺ or the prophets, does not speculate on rulings, and stays within mainstream Islamic tradition. Every Aya conversation is logged and visible to a parent or teacher. The app has no ads, no tracking, and no in-app purchases for children.
Classroom pricing
Email hello@ayaquest.ai with your school name, country, and approximate number of students. We'll send a classroom-pack offer code that gives each family Pro at a discount — no per-seat licensing, no LMS integration required.
Try AyaQuest free on the App Store →
Questions
Does AyaQuest replace what a madrasah does?
No. AyaQuest is meaning-first and built for the at-home or in-class moment when a child is ready to think about what a surah means in their own life. Recitation, tajwid, and memorization stay with the teacher and the madrasah — AyaQuest is a complement, not a substitute.
How does it fit in a classroom?
Most teachers we've worked with use AyaQuest as a 10-minute opener or closer to a class. The Walk-with-Aya bedtime mode also works well as a homework anchor — kids hear the surah at night, discuss it the next session.
Can the parent dashboard show progress to a teacher?
Today, the dashboard is private to the parent of each child. If your school wants a classroom-level view, write to us — we're collecting demand before we ship the teacher-view feature.
Is there classroom pricing?
Yes — write to hello@ayaquest.ai with your school name, country, and approximate number of students, and we'll send a classroom-pack offer code.