Mathematics
ریاضیات · د شمېرنې علم
Grades 6–12From fractions to calculus. She learns to think in patterns, prove theorems, and solve problems the world told her she'd never face.
Six subjects. Seven grade levels. Taught by Afghan women educators in Dari and Pashto. This isn't a supplement or a workaround — it's the same secondary education every girl in Afghanistan was promised and then denied.
ریاضیات · د شمېرنې علم
Grades 6–12From fractions to calculus. She learns to think in patterns, prove theorems, and solve problems the world told her she'd never face.
علوم · ساینس
Grades 6–12Physics, chemistry, biology. She understands atoms and ecosystems — the building blocks of the world she's been locked out of.
انگلیسی · انګلیسي
Grades 6–12Reading, writing, grammar. English opens doors beyond Afghanistan — to universities, to jobs, to a world that's waiting for her voice.
جغرافیه · جغرافیه
Grades 6–12Countries, climates, economies. She maps a world she may never see in person — but one day, she might.
مطالعات اسلامی · اسلامي زده کړې
Grades 6–12Quranic study, ethics, history. Grounded in faith and tradition — because her education honors who she is, not just who she could become.
علوم کامپیوتر · د کمپیوټر علم
Grades 6–12Logic, algorithms, digital literacy. The language of the future — taught to a girl the present tried to forget.
When I finished my first geometry proof on the app, I cried. Not because it was hard. Because for the first time in two years, I felt like a student again.
— A 16-year-old girl in Herat
These six subjects were chosen because they mirror the Afghan national secondary curriculum. When this ban ends — and it will end — these girls will not be behind. They'll be ready.
Aligned with the Afghan Ministry of Education's pre-ban national standards.
Taught by qualified Afghan women educators — many of whom lost their own teaching jobs under the ban.
Every lesson is available in both Dari and Pashto, so no girl is left behind because of language.
Video lessons, written exercises, and assessments at every level — not passive watching, but active learning.
Every weekday, she opens the app and follows a structured school day — just like she used to. Morning, midday, afternoon. Real lessons, real assessments, real progress tracked by a real teacher.
Lessons download once and work without internet — critical in provinces where connectivity is unreliable.
Each lesson includes a video explanation, a written summary, practice problems, and a graded assessment.
Her teacher reviews her work, provides feedback, and tracks her progress from enrollment through graduation.
Right now, somewhere in Kabul, a fourteen-year-old girl is studying algebra on a phone hidden under her bed. She has not missed a single lesson in nine months. Sponsor her.