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RevHub

Your child is stuck on English homework. You don't know how to help. That's exactly why RevHub exists.

RevHub gives your child weekly worksheets that build writing skills, a Writing Coach that reviews their actual work and gives real, useful feedback on every piece, and a Reference Library of printable study guides they can use alongside any piece of writing. Most tools can be personalised to any book your child is reading — but they also work without one. Your child picks what they need, when they need it. Guidance, not ghostwriting.

Getting started with RevHub.

Most parents sign up because something specific triggered it — a disappointing report, an essay their child struggled with, or just a feeling that their writing isn't where it should be. Whatever brought you here, here's how to start.

1

Pick a tool.

RevHub has four tools — Writing Worksheets, Vocab Builder, Essay Planner, and Writing Coach. Each one does something different. Your child picks the one that matches what they need right now: building a specific writing skill, planning an essay, strengthening vocabulary, or getting feedback on something they’ve already written.

2

Enter the details.

Each tool asks for what it needs. Writing Worksheets and Vocab Builder ask for a book title — your child’s school set text or one they’ve chosen themselves. The Essay Planner asks for a question. The Writing Coach just needs a piece of writing. Some tools, like Descriptive Writing Worksheets, don’t need a book at all. Your child can use a different book every time, or the same one.

3

Get feedback on their writing.

The Writing Coach gives specific, detailed feedback on any piece of writing — worksheet responses, essay drafts, school homework. Not ‘good effort.’ More like ‘your second sentence loses the argument here — try this instead.’ That’s how they actually improve.

4

Build the habit.

One worksheet per week. An Essay Planner session when a big piece of writing comes up. Vocab Builder to strengthen their language. Writing Coach whenever they want feedback. Over a term, that’s consistent, targeted practice that most students simply don’t get elsewhere.

AI that teaches. Not AI that does.

You've probably heard the warnings. AI is cheating. Students are using it to write their essays. Schools are banning it. And you're right to pay attention — because there is 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 worksheets teach specific writing skills through structured practice. The Writing Coach reads your child's actual writing and tells them what's working, what isn't, and how to make it better — without writing a single word for them. It quotes their own sentences back to them. It points out where their argument breaks down. It shows them what a stronger version looks like, then asks them to write it.

That's not cheating. That's exactly what a great tutor does.

The difference is simple.AI that produces work is a shortcut. AI that teaches skills is a tool. RevHub is a tool — and your child's teachers will see the difference in their writing.

Not sure where to start? Find your situation.

My child has a specific book they’re studying — at school or one they’ve chosen themselves.

This is where RevHub is at its best. Start with Writing Worksheets (Analytical) — they’re built around the actual book your child is reading. Add Vocab Builder to strengthen the language they can use when writing about that book. When they’ve completed a worksheet task, send it to the Writing Coach for feedback.

Writing Worksheets (Analytical) + Vocab Builder + Writing Coach

We don’t have a particular book right now.

No problem. Writing Worksheets (Descriptive) teach four key writing techniques — imagery, sensory detail, atmosphere, and characterisation — without needing a specific book. The Essay Planning Tool works with any essay question. And the Writing Coach gives feedback on any piece of writing your child produces. You’ve got plenty to work with.

Writing Worksheets (Descriptive) + Essay Planning Tool + Writing Coach

My child has an essay due and doesn’t know where to start.

That blank page panic is exactly what the Essay Planner solves. Your child enters the essay question and the book they’re writing about, and the planner walks them through building their argument step by step — breaking down the question, selecting evidence, and mapping their paragraphs. It’s a guided thinking process, not a template. Once they’ve written the essay, submit it to the Writing Coach for detailed feedback before they hand it in.

Essay Planning Tool + Writing Coach

My child's writing is generally weak — I want a long-term plan.

Start with Writing Worksheets — Analytical if they have a book (school text or personal choice), Descriptive if they don’t. Work through one skill per week. After each worksheet, use the Writing Coach for feedback. Add Vocab Builder once a fortnight to build their word range. Over a term, this covers all six core writing skills with personalised feedback on every attempt.

Writing Worksheets + Writing Coach + Vocab Builder (weekly rhythm)

My child just needs to build their vocabulary.

Vocab Builder is designed for exactly this. Enter the book your child is reading — their school set text or a book they’ve chosen — and it generates exercises around the key words and phrases from that text. Not just definitions, but how to actually use those words in their own writing.

Vocab Builder (requires a book title)

Four tools. One system.

Four tools, each with a clear purpose. Some work together, some stand on their own — your child uses what they need, when they need it.

1

Learn the skill

A Writing Worksheet teaches one specific skill. Your child reads the teaching, studies the examples, and writes their own response.

2

Plan before writing

Your child stares at an essay question and doesn’t know where to start. The Essay Planner walks them through breaking down the question, identifying their argument, selecting their evidence, and structuring their paragraphs — so they face a clear plan, not a blank page. It’s a guided thinking process, not a template. The student does the thinking; the planner structures it.

3

Get feedback

They submit their writing to the Writing Coach, which gives targeted feedback — not generic comments, but feedback tied to exactly what they were practising. It works on worksheet responses, school essays, or any other writing.

4

Build vocabulary

Alongside the worksheets, Vocab Builder strengthens the language your child can draw on when writing about their text.

The loop is simple: Learn. Write. Get feedback. Write better.

Plus the Reference Library

Every subscriber gets 8 printable study guides — essay structure templates, literary devices, transition words, quoting techniques, and more. Your child can keep them open while working through any worksheet or essay, or print them and pin them above the desk.

How much time does this actually take?

You don't need hours. Here's a realistic rhythm that fits around school, homework, and everything else.

Each week (about 30–40 minutes total)

  • One Writing Worksheet (20 min)
  • One Writing Coach submission (10 min)
  • Optional: review feedback together (10 min)

Each fortnight

  • One Vocab Builder session (15 min)

When an essay or assessment is coming up

  • One Essay Planning Tool session (15 min)
  • One Writing Coach submission on their draft (10 min)

Over a school term (10 weeks):Your child will have practised 10 different writing skills, received personalised Writing Coach feedback on every one, built their vocabulary twice, and had a structured planning tool ready for any essay or assessment. The Reference Library is always there too — your child can pull up a study guide any time they need to check essay structure, find a transition word, or look up a literary device.

What the Australian Curriculum expects — and how RevHub delivers it.

You don't need to understand the curriculum to use RevHub — that's our job. But if you're curious about what your child is actually supposed to be learning in Years 7–9 English, here's a plain-English summary.

Language

This is about how English works — the mechanics. Your child is learning to write sentences that vary in length and structure, choose precise words instead of vague ones, and use grammar deliberately rather than accidentally. By Year 9, they're expected to control language with confidence: the right word, the right sentence shape, the right level of formality for the task.

Literature

This is about understanding texts — not just what happens in a book, but how the writer made it work. Your child is learning to analyse an author's choices: why they used a particular metaphor, how they built tension, what effect a short sentence has on the reader. In Years 7–9, this moves from describing what they noticed to explaining why it matters.

Literacy

This is where it all comes together in your child's own writing. They're expected to plan, draft, and create texts that make a clear point, support it with evidence, and hold together from start to finish. By Year 9, that means writing a sustained, persuasive argument — with a strong introduction, connected paragraphs, and a conclusion that actually concludes.

The bottom line:The curriculum isn't asking students to memorise grammar rules or fill in worksheets about nouns. It's asking them to write well — clearly, precisely, and persuasively. That's exactly what RevHub practises.

It grows with your child.

The Australian Curriculum doesn't teach the same thing three years in a row. It builds. Year 7 lays the foundations. Year 8 adds complexity. Year 9 expects independence. RevHub follows the same trajectory.

7

Year 7

Your child is learning the basics of analytical writing, often for the first time. RevHub worksheets at this level use more support: sentence starters, structured prompts, and shorter writing tasks. The focus is on building confidence with core skills — varying sentences, choosing better words, and saying what they think rather than just retelling the story.

8

Year 8

The scaffolding eases. Your child is expected to write more independently, make stronger arguments, and start linking their ideas across paragraphs. RevHub worksheets reflect this: tasks are longer, examples are more nuanced, and the teaching introduces more analytical vocabulary.

9

Year 9

This is where it all comes together. Your child is expected to write sustained, well-structured responses that analyse texts with precision and argue a clear position. RevHub worksheets at this level have minimal hand-holding and expect students to apply skills independently — just like their school assessments do.

The important part:You don't need to figure out what level your child is at. Each time they generate a worksheet, they choose their year group and enter the book they're reading — whether it's a school set text or something they've chosen. RevHub adjusts automatically. The skill is the same, but the complexity, the support, and the expectations match what their teachers are looking for at that level.

Have questions?

We've answered the most common questions parents ask — about how RevHub works, the AI, subscriptions, curriculum, privacy, and more.

Read our FAQ

Your child's school is teaching them the curriculum. RevHub makes sure the practice at home actually matches — with worksheets that build skills and a Writing Coach that gives real feedback on every piece of writing.

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