Something is coming

Learn anything, from the ground up.

Skola is an AI tutor that teaches the Nigerian curriculum from first principles — not cramming. Join the waitlist and learn the way it should’ve always been.

The problem

Cramming gets you to the exam hall. It doesn’t get you through it.

Rote memorisation fades the moment the question is worded differently. One teacher to sixty students can’t fix that. Private tutors aren’t an option for most. So understanding gets skipped — and the exam knows.

Crammed, then dark
Connected, it stays lit
Why Skola works

Built around how you actually learn.

Four ideas that turn studying into understanding — and keep you coming back.

Concepts that click

Every Skola session is something you do, not just read. You build each idea from first principles and play with it — in games, labs, and step-by-step problems — until it actually clicks. So when a WAEC question is worded differently from the one you practised, you still know what to do.

Concepts that click

Built to make you think

Like the best teachers, Kira doesn’t just hand you the answer. She asks the questions that make you reason it out, shows you where your thinking slipped, and stays with you until the idea makes sense — not just until you’re right. That’s the difference between passing the exam and actually knowing the subject.

Built to make you think

Meets you exactly where you are

Skola maps every concept and tracks what you’ve mastered and where you’re stuck. Then it builds your practice around the gaps — moving faster when you’re flying, slowing down when a topic needs more time. Two students never get the same path, because no two students are stuck in the same place.

Meets you exactly where you are

Built to keep you going

Learning should feel like a challenge, not a chore. Levels, streaks, points, and daily goals turn your JAMB and WAEC prep into something you actually want to come back to — and every session moves you one step further along your path.

Built to keep you going
How Skola teaches

Four steps to actually understanding something.

A loop, not a checklist. You don’t move on until it sticks — then you do it again with the next idea.

01

First principles

We build the idea from the ground up — no “just memorise this”.

? 02

Socratic

We ask, you think — and we catch what you’ve misunderstood.

03

Practice & games

You use the idea until it sticks — not until the bell rings.

04

Mastery

You prove it, the node turns green, then you move on — and loop.

mastery feeds the next idea — the loop continues
See your Skola

One tutor. It adapts to you.

An SSS3 student prepping JAMB and a 6-year-old learning to count don’t need the same teacher. Skola becomes the right one for each.

Who are you?
What are you learning?
Skola Web Academic mode

Fast, chat-first, runs in any browser — built for patchy data.

How Skola would teach this

Voltage? Picture NEPA pushing current down a wire — more push, more flow. You’ll derive Ohm’s law before you ever memorise it.

Concept unlocked — mastered
Build mine first →
Three apps

One brain. Wherever you learn.

The same knowledge graph, in three bodies — meeting each learner where they are.

Explain photosynthesis simply
Sure — think of a leaf as a tiny…
Skola Web · everyone

Fast, chat-first, in your browser.

Instant answers, light on data, works on any phone.

3D LAB · offline
Skola Desktop · deep work

Premium, immersive, works offline.

3D labs and long sessions — no connection required.

Kira says
Let’s count the mangoes! 🏻
Skola Kids · ages 4–12

Playful and voice-led.

Quests, voice and Kira — learning that feels like play.

Curriculum

Every exam that matters — and the years before them.

From early years to school certificate to university entrance, plus vocational paths. Mapped to the Nigerian curriculum, node by node.

WAEC
School certificate
JAMB
UTME entrance
NECO
National exam
NABTEB
Technical board
Post-UTME
Screening
TVET
Vocational
Kids
Ages 4–12
How Skola thinks
Weekly essay · 5 min read

Why rote learning fails WAEC — and what “first principles” actually means.

The most common way Nigerian students study is the one most likely to fail them. Here’s the fix.

The Skola founder
Read the essay →
cram → forget
connect → keep
Waitlist

Be first in line.

Tell us who you are, and we’ll build your Skola first.

Questions, answered.

There’ll be a generous free tier so anyone can learn, plus affordable premium for offline 3D labs and deeper practice. We’re designing for low-data, low-cost first.

We’re building now. Join the waitlist and you’ll be among the first in — and we’ll email you before launch, not after.

WAEC, JAMB, NECO, NABTEB and Post-UTME, plus TVET/vocational paths and Skola Kids for ages 4–12.

Skola Desktop is built to work offline, including 3D labs — so a patchy connection doesn’t stop a study session.

Yes. Teachers can join as collaborators — past questions, notes and curricula. Pick “Contribute content” in the form and we’ll route you to the educator pipeline.