Qlocka positions itself as a daily “neuro-coding” planning tool for children, rather than a conventional educational course. Designed for children aged 6–12 and up, it combines a physical planning board, activity magnets, reward charts, and a companion mobile app to help children turn everyday routines—mornings, homework, chores, reading, bedtime, and more—into visual, actionable habit workflows. The website emphasizes repetition, visualization, physical interaction, and positive reinforcement as ways to train planning, focus, and follow-through.
In terms of category, Qlocka is closer to an executive-function training, habit-building, and family education support tool for children. It is not a live class, recorded course, or 1-on-1 tutoring service. In practice, it relies on parents and children choosing 3–5 tasks together before bed each day, completing them the next day, and reviewing rewards in the evening. The companion app provides stars, badges, streak tracking, reminders, a parent dashboard, and growth insights. As for certification, the site does not mention any completion certificate or professional accreditation. The website is in English, with no stated Chinese-language support.
The biggest uncertainty at present is pricing and delivery. The website explicitly states that the product is “not yet available to purchase” and currently only offers updates on its development in Australia, Malaysia, and globally, suggesting that it is still in development or pre-launch. Pricing, whether it will be a one-time purchase, whether the app will require a subscription, payment methods, and shipping coverage have not been disclosed, making it difficult to assess its real value for money.
The main advantage is that the product design fits how children think: magnets, time points, rewards, and review sessions can make abstract planning easier to understand, and may also suit neurodiverse children with ADHD, ASD, dyslexia, and similar needs. It shifts parents from repeatedly nagging to planning together with the child, which may help reduce daily conflict. The downside is that claims such as “results in 2–4 weeks” and “improved independence in 90 days” appear to be based mainly on trial feedback, with no independent research data provided. Its effectiveness also depends heavily on consistent parental follow-through, and it cannot replace professional therapy or a structured curriculum.
Qlocka may suit families looking to improve procrastination, forgetfulness, chaotic mornings, bedtime conflict, and screen-time management. It could also be used in classrooms, coaching, and therapeutic settings. For users in China, current network accessibility, payment options, shipping, and app-store availability are all unclear. Even if accessible, the English interface and lack of localized task magnets may create barriers. Alternatives could include Chinese children’s habit-tracking charts, family task magnet boards, visual schedules, or local executive-function training services.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on qlocka.com official site.
qlocka.com is an Unknown Education provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 5.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach qlocka.com directly.