Grown-Up Corner
The Grown-Up Corner is a small dashboard for parents and teachers. It gives you a quick, honest read on how your child is doing in LuLinDingo without setting up an account or sending anything anywhere.
Getting in
Look for the "Grown-ups" entry with the gear icon, tucked at the edge of the tab bar so children mostly skip past it. Tapping it brings up a short gate before the dashboard opens.
The gate is one multiplication problem, something like 7 × 8, with both numbers between 6 and 9. Type the answer on the number pad and you are in. A child in the younger age bands hasn't learned these times tables yet, so the problem keeps little ones out, but you will solve it in a couple of seconds.
There is no password, no timer, and no lockout. If you tap the wrong number, the box shakes, clears, and shows a fresh problem. Try again as many times as you like. The gate locks itself again when you leave, so a quick re-solve is all it takes next time.
It stays on the device
Everything on the dashboard is read straight from this device. There is no account, and none of it leaves the browser. The screen says "Everything here stays on this device," and that is literal. The Grown-Up Corner only reads the progress your child has already made here.
What you'll see
At the top, four tiles give you the basics: the current streak, total XP, lessons completed, and average stars.
Below that, a small bar chart shows the XP earned over recent days, so you can see whether practice has been steady or patchy.
The mastery list shows how far your child has got in each operation: addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division. Each row shows how many tiers are finished out of five and the stars earned, so you can spot which areas are strong and which still need work.
The "when they practice" bars split sessions into morning, afternoon, and evening. Over time this shows when your child tends to sit down with the app.
Reading the notes
The dashboard turns those numbers into a few short notes in plain language. If a child is sailing through an operation, it might suggest bumping the tier in Settings, and gives you a button to open Settings directly. A long streak gets a word of encouragement; a break gets a gentle nudge to start again.
There is also one "practice together" suggestion. If something is giving your child trouble, that becomes the suggestion, usually a few problems on paper with no timer. If nothing is stuck, it points to something light, like counting prices or steps out loud together. The notes are conversation starters, so use the ones that fit and ignore the rest.