
Not every parent is an English teacher. RevHub fills the gap.
Weekly worksheets build real writing skills. The Writing Coach gives tutor-quality feedback on their actual work. All built around any book your child is reading — their school set text or one they've chosen themselves — and designed to teach, not do the work for them.
Curriculum-aligned for Australian Years 7–9 English. Guidance, not ghostwriting.
Start your free trialHow RevHub fits into your week.
RevHub works on three levels. One builds skills proactively. One teaches your child to plan before they write. And one catches them when they're stuck. Together, they close the gap between school and home.
30 minutes of focused practice
Worksheets teach a specific writing skill each week — sentence structure, argument building, persuasive technique — using any book your child is reading. The Vocab Builder strengthens their language alongside, building the vocabulary they need to write with confidence.
Independent work. No parental input needed.
Plan before they write
The Essay Planner walks your child through how to break down any essay question, gather their evidence, and map out their paragraphs — before they write a single word. Works with any book, any question, any assessment.
15 minutes of planning saves hours of rewriting.
Feedback that closes the loop
When your child finishes a worksheet, they submit their response to the Writing Coach — and get back targeted feedback on what they did well and how to improve. It also works on school essays, homework, or any other writing.
Like having a tutor review their work — available any time.
Real feedback on your child's writing — not a mark and a vague comment.
After a worksheet or on any piece of writing, the Writing Coach gives detailed, encouraging feedback: what worked, what to improve, and exactly how to make it better — with rewrite examples using their own words.
Here's what your child's feedback looks like
Task: Write an analytical paragraph exploring how the author creates tension in a key scene.
Text: The Outsiders by S.E. Hinton — the church fire scene (Chapter 6)
When Johnny and Ponyboy hear the kids screaming inside the burning church they don't even think about it they just run in. The fire is really hot and everywhere and Ponyboy can barely breathe. Hinton makes it really tense because you don't know if they're going to make it out alive. Johnny keeps pushing kids through the window even though the roof is about to collapse on him. Ponyboy describes the flames like they are alive, like they are trying to grab him. The author uses short sentences to make it feel fast and scary. You can tell Ponyboy is terrified but he doesn't stop helping. When Dally comes in and drags Ponyboy out you feel relieved but also worried because Johnny is still inside. The whole scene makes the reader feel like they are there in the fire too. It is a really powerful part of the book because it shows the greasers aren't just troublemakers, they are actually brave and care about people.
167 words
What You Did Well
You've picked one of the most intense scenes in the novel, and you clearly understand why it matters — not just what happens. Your final sentence is genuinely strong:
“it shows the greasers aren't just troublemakers, they are actually brave and care about people.”
Your writingThat's a real insight about how Hinton uses this scene to challenge the reader's assumptions about the greasers. Many students summarise the fire without connecting it to a bigger idea — you did.
You also picked up on something important when you wrote:
“Ponyboy describes the flames like they are alive, like they are trying to grab him.”
Your writingThat's personification, and spotting it shows you're reading closely. Honestly, that image made me stop and reread it — it's one of the strongest observations in your response.
What to Work On
Watch out for “really” doing heavy lifting across your response — “really hot,” “really tense,” “really powerful.” Each time, there's a more precise word waiting. “Really hot” could become “suffocating” or “overwhelming.” Swapping in stronger vocabulary doesn't just sound better — it shows the marker you can control your word choices.
Your opening sentence is a run-on:
“When Johnny and Ponyboy hear the kids screaming inside the burning church they don't even think about it they just run in.”
Your writingIt's actually three ideas jammed together. Splitting them would give each moment more impact:
“When Johnny and Ponyboy hear the children screaming inside the burning church, they don't hesitate.”
Try this insteadTry This Next Time
Next time you name a technique (like short sentences or personification), try dropping in a direct quote from the novel, then explaining the effect in your own words. That three-step pattern — name it, quote it, explain it — is the fastest way to lift your analytical writing.
Overall
You understand this scene and why it matters. The bones of a strong response are here. Your next step is precision — tighter sentences, specific quotes, and vocabulary that earns its place. Keep going.
Every response is generated fresh based on the student's actual writing — no templates, no generic comments.
This feedback is generated by AI. For formal assessment, always consult your child's teacher.
Like a tutor, but available any time.
Your child submits a piece of writing — their worksheet response, a school essay, anything — and gets back feedback that references their actual sentences, praises what they got right, and shows them a stronger version of what they were trying to say. When it's linked to a worksheet, the feedback targets the exact skill they were practising. It's specific, constructive, and designed to build confidence — not just correct mistakes.
A structured revision tool — not an open-ended chatbot.
If you're uneasy about your child using general AI tools, RevHub is different. It's a purpose-built revision tool for Australian students — structured, contained, and focused entirely on building real writing skills. Your child can't ask it to write essays for them. It teaches them to write better ones themselves.
AI that teaches. Not AI that does.
There's a version of AI that does your child's homework for them. RevHub isn't that.
Every tool in RevHub is designed to build understanding, not bypass it. The Writing Coach gives feedback the way a good tutor would — pointing out what works, quoting your child's own words back to them, showing them how to improve. The worksheets build skills through practice, not shortcuts.
Your child won't get answers handed to them. They'll get explanations, demonstrations, and feedback that pushes their thinking forward. That's not cheating. That's exactly how learning works.
RevHub uses AI to help your child think more clearly, write more precisely, and learn what good work actually looks like.
What's inside RevHub.
One subscription. Two ways to help your child. Everything built around the book they're actually reading.
Writing Worksheets
Each worksheet teaches a specific skill — sentence structure, argument building, persuasive technique — using any book your child is reading, whether it's their school set text or a book they've chosen themselves.
Essay Planner
Structured planning sheets that help your child break down any essay question, gather evidence, and organise their thinking before they write.
Vocab Builder
Vocabulary worksheets built around words from the book they're reading — definitions, context, and practice exercises.
Writing Coach
After finishing a worksheet, your child submits their response and gets feedback targeted to the skill they just practised. It also works on school essays, homework, or any other writing — detailed, tutor-quality feedback every time. It guides them through the problem. It doesn't do the work for them.
Why this works when other stuff hasn't.
It's built around their book.
Not generic. Not random. Relevant.Most worksheets use random texts with no connection to what your child is doing at school. RevHub uses any book they're reading — their school set text or one they've chosen themselves. The examples make sense, the tasks feel relevant, and your child isn't starting from scratch every time.
It teaches writing skills that actually matter.
We don't do comprehension quizzes or fill-in-the-blanks. RevHub targets the skills that move marks: sentence variety, precise vocabulary, building an argument, structuring a persuasive paragraph. These are the things examiners are looking for.
Just enter the book and go.
No prompt engineering. No figuring out what to ask. No setup guides or tutorials. You enter any book your child is reading, pick a skill, and RevHub does the rest. It's designed so any parent can use it — even if you've never touched an AI tool before.
Built to the Australian Curriculum v9.0.
Every worksheet and feedback session is aligned to Years 7–9 English expectations. The language, the skills, and the standards match what Australian schools actually teach. No translating from a US or UK resource and hoping it fits.
See how RevHub maps to the curriculum →Built with safety in mind.
If you're uneasy about your child using AI, RevHub is different. It's not a chatbot. It's a structured tool with real guardrails.
Curriculum-aligned
Built to the Australian Curriculum v9.0 for Years 7–9 English. The skills match what schools actually teach and assess.
Structured, not open-ended
Your child enters a book, chooses a skill, and works through a guided task. No free-form prompting. No open AI chat.
Content filtering built in
If a student enters a book that isn't appropriate for Years 7–9, the system blocks it. You don't need to police what they're doing.
See what your child will actually get.
This is a real RevHub worksheet — not a mock-up. Each one teaches a skill, shows it in action, then gives your child a structured task to practise it.
and Variety
If all your sentences are the same length and shape, your writing becomes flat and hard to read — even if your ideas are good. Varying your sentences does two things: it keeps the reader engaged, and it lets you control emphasis.
The setting is dark. The streets are foggy. The people are poor. Holmes solves the crime.
The streets of Victorian London are dark, foggy and poverty-stricken. Crime feels inevitable. Holmes's cold logic wasn't just entertaining — it was a fantasy of control.
Every worksheet follows the same format: learn the skill, see it in action, then practise it. Your child builds confidence because the structure is familiar — but the content changes every week.
Simple pricing. Everything included.
Start your free 7-day trial — 2 worksheets, 2 planning sheets, 2 Writing Coach sessions, and unlimited Vocab Builder.
- 2 worksheets
- 2 planning sheets
- 2 Writing Coach feedback sessions
- Unlimited Vocab Builder
- 10 worksheets per month
- 10 planning sheets per month
- 10 Writing Coach feedback sessions
- Unlimited Vocab Builder
- Personalised to any book your child is reading
- Curriculum-aligned for Years 7–9
- Cancel anytime. No lock-in.
Every tool is structured, curriculum-aligned, and built with content filtering — so your child can use RevHub independently.
Questions parents ask us.
What year levels does RevHub cover?
Years 7–9 English — the sweet spot where writing skills really start to matter for assessment and where most students need the most targeted practice.
Will this actually help my child’s marks?
The worksheets and Writing Coach target the specific skills examiners assess: sentence variety, vocabulary precision, argument construction, and paragraph structure. They practise exactly what shows up in school assessments.
Is using RevHub considered cheating?
No. RevHub doesn’t produce work for your child — it teaches them how to do it better. The worksheets build skills through structured practice. Your child does all the writing.
Can I cancel anytime?
Yes. No contract, no lock-in, no cancellation fee. If RevHub isn’t working for your family, you can cancel from your account in about ten seconds.
Ready to see the difference?
Start your 7-day free trial — 2 worksheets, 2 planning sheets, 2 Writing Coach sessions, and unlimited Vocab Builder.
Start your free trial