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Bodhaka

Designed for real learning

Education
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Hunted byNaveen SrikantaiahNaveen Srikantaiah

Bodhaka creates the next generation of educational tools inspired by decades of research on how students learn best.

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For a long time, the conversation about AI in education has been stuck at two extremes. Ban it, because kids will use it to cheat. Or hand a child a chatbot and call it a tutor. Both miss the point. AI is not going to leave classrooms. The honest question is what we do with it. Used well, AI does not replace teachers. It fills the gaps that no single teacher can fill alone. It listens, repeats, simulates, watches, nudges, and waits, all at the pace a particular child needs on a particular day. The most interesting work happening in education today is not chatbots that hand out answers. It is a quieter set of tools that change how a child actually learns. Here are some of them. 1. Track each small skill, not just marks Most school reports stop at a number out of one hundred. That number hides everything that actually matters. A well tested approach called Bayesian knowledge tracing fixes this. The idea is simple. Every chapter is a bag of small skills. Every time a student answers a question, the system updates how confident it is that the student has mastered each skill. Over time, you stop seeing “65% in physics” and start seeing “strong on Newton’s laws, shaky on free body diagrams, careless slips on units.” That changes what you do next. 2. Put safety first when the user is a child When the user is a child, safety is not a polish step at the end. It has to be the first layer of the product. A simple, sturdy approach is a two layer safety gate. The first layer checks the question before it ever reaches the AI, so off topic, unsafe, or inappropriate queries never get answered. The second layer checks the AI’s response before it ever reaches the child. Two gates, both shut, before any output goes through. This is the kind of work that is invisible when it goes right, and the only thing that matters when it goes wrong. 3. Explain things two ways, on demand A single brilliant explanation is never enough. Some kids get it on first pass. Many do not. A narrator mode that walks through a concept on a blackboard can pair with a slower, step by step mode for the same topic. The child decides which one they need today. Confusion gets caught at the source, before it snowballs into the next chapter. 4. Make them teach it back If a child can explain a concept clearly in their own words, they understand it. If they cannot, they do not, no matter what the marks say. This is the Feynman technique, and it is one of the most powerful study habits ever documented. AI is a patient listener. It can ask a student to articulate a topic for ten minutes, evaluate the clarity, point out the gaps, and suggest exactly what to revisit. This single habit, done weekly, separates real learning from clever guessing. 5. Ask the next question, instead of giving the answer Socrates did not lecture. He asked. AI can do the same. Instead of handing over a worked answer, a Socratic or “three why” style guide asks the next small question that nudges the student forward. Why is that true? Why does that step come next? Why does the unit change there? The student reasons their way to the answer themselves. The understanding sticks because they built it. 6. Audio lessons in the language they live in Indian households are bilingual by default. A child may study in English at school and a vernacular language at home. Dual language audio lessons sit naturally in that gap. The child listens on the way to tuition or during a chore, while a parent who is more comfortable in Hindi can follow along too. Learning stops being something locked inside a textbook. 7. Make them solve, not watch A chatbot that hands out solutions is not a tutor. An interactive whiteboard flips this. The child solves the problem themselves, line by line. The AI watches quietly, and only steps in when asked, or when the child has clearly gone off track. The work is theirs. The help is on tap 8. Let them run experiments without breaking beakers School labs are rare, slow, and often closed. Virtual labs and physics playgrounds let a child run experiments at home, on a phone or a laptop. They can change the mass of a ball, the gravity of a planet, the angle of an inclined plane, the strength of a current, and watch what happens. Equations stop being symbols on a page and start meaning something they can see and play with. Curiosity gets a sandbox. 9. Let them build, not just consume The most exciting use of AI in learning is not answers. It is making. A student can describe an app they want, in plain English, and vibe code it alongside an AI. They test it, fix what breaks, and walk away with something they actually built. Or they pick a project they are curious about, and the AI generates the simulation behind it. Curiosity becomes a thing in the world. This is where AI quietly outclasses every previous form of edtech. For the first time, a fourteen year old can ship something real. 10. Look after the mind, not just the marks A stressed child does not learn. Ten minute guided meditations and breathing exercises, available on demand before a tough chapter or a test, are not a luxury. They are part of the system. Education that ignores the mind is incomplete, and AI gives us a quiet, judgement free way to make mindfulness part of the daily routine. 11. Map a career, not just a syllabus A child in Class 9 has no real idea what they want to become, and that is fine. But by Class 11 the questions get sharper. AI can take a student’s interests, strengths, and curiosities, and map them to real career paths, with the universities and entrance exams that fit each one. The conversation moves from “what are your marks” to “where do you want to go.” 12. In one place, not eleven These are not separate gimmicks. They work best when they sit together, in one calm, child safe space. A tutor that explains. A whiteboard that watches the child solve. Labs that let them experiment. Articulation that makes them teach it back. A guide that asks instead of tells. A mind that gets ten quiet minutes when it needs them. A career conversation when the time is right. Stack the slices the right way and the holes stop lining up. This is exactly the bet we are making at Bodhaka BrightChalk, an after school AI study room for Indian students in Classes 6 to 12, where every one of these ideas lives under one roof.

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About Bodhaka on Product Hunt

Designed for real learning

Bodhaka was submitted on Product Hunt and earned 0 upvotes and 1 comments, placing #42 on the daily leaderboard. Bodhaka creates the next generation of educational tools inspired by decades of research on how students learn best.

Bodhaka was featured in Education (78.6k followers) on Product Hunt. Together, these topics include over 28.7k products, making this a competitive space to launch in.

Who hunted Bodhaka?

Bodhaka was hunted by Naveen Srikantaiah. A “hunter” on Product Hunt is the community member who submits a product to the platform — uploading the images, the link, and tagging the makers behind it. Hunters typically write the first comment explaining why a product is worth attention, and their followers are notified the moment they post. Around 79% of featured launches on Product Hunt are self-hunted by their makers, but a well-known hunter still acts as a signal of quality to the rest of the community. See the full all-time top hunters leaderboard to discover who is shaping the Product Hunt ecosystem.

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