What works for your 9-year-old is completely wrong for your 5-year-old. LoreZest's multi-profile system was built to eliminate that compromise — up to 4 fully independent reading worlds in one app.
Families with more than one child know the challenge all too well: what works for your 9-year-old is completely wrong for your 5-year-old. Books, apps, and learning tools often force families to pick one age group and compromise for everyone else. LoreZest was designed to eliminate that compromise entirely.
The Multi-Profile Difference
LoreZest supports up to 4 individual child profiles per account — each completely independent, fully personalized, and tracked separately. Each profile holds the child's name, photo & avatar, age & reading level, personal story library, and full progress data including streaks, badges, and vocabulary mastered.
Why Separate Profiles Matter for Learning
According to research on differentiated instruction (Tomlinson, 2000), children learn best when content is matched precisely to their current developmental level. This "zone of proximal development" concept, first described by Vygotsky (1978), is the foundation of how LoreZest calibrates stories. A 5-year-old and a 10-year-old picking the same "Space Adventure" theme will receive entirely different stories in terms of vocabulary, sentence length, and narrative complexity.
Competition That Builds, Not Damages
LoreZest encourages healthy sibling competition through profile-specific progress tracking. Each child has their own streak, badge collection, and vocabulary count. Children are motivated to grow — but because the content is personalized, they're comparing their own growth rather than competing on raw performance. A 5-year-old's first "Bookworm" badge is just as meaningful as a 10-year-old's "Story Wizard."
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#family app#multiple children#reading levels#child profiles