
Whether parents want to understand their child’s math progress or find ways to support their learning at home, there are plenty of ways Prodigy can help!
Using your teacher dashboard, you can:
- Dive into Prodigy data to see student understanding and learning progress
- Send Prodigy home so parents can track and motivate their child’s learning outside of school
1. Explore Reports in your teacher dashboard

For every question students answer as they play Prodigy, you’ll get real-time data on their progress and understanding with one of eight reports:
- Progress
- Student Comprehension
- Student Usage
- Weekly Activity
- Placement Test
- Assignments/Plans
- Topic Coverage
- Curriculum Coverage
Student Comprehension report

Get an at-a-glance view on how students are performing on different math skills within a selected time period.
- Select Reports in your teacher dashboard, then select Student Comprehension
- Using the drop-down menus, select the student you’d like to see data for
- Pick a date range using the drop-down menu
You’ll see a grade-by-grade breakdown of student work. Select a grade to see:
- What standards a student worked on
- How many questions they completed
- Specific skills students completed within a standard
- The average grade for each skill
- Sample questions students encountered
To include a hard copy of the report in a student portfolio for parents, select Print Report. It’s a time-saving way to give parents a big-picture overview of their child’s progress. All the data is there — just click print!
Assignments/Plans report

Did one student ace an Assignment or practice a Plan? When you use your Assessments tool to send lesson-aligned content in Prodigy, you’ll automatically get insights into how the student performed.
Share successes or areas of opportunity with parents to give them insights into how they can support learning at home.
- Select Reports in your teacher dashboard, then select Assignments/Plans
- You’ll see a list of all the Assignments, Plans, Test Preps and Placement Test results in one place. Select the Assessment you’d like to share with parents
- Use the top right-hand buttons to switch between a list of Assessments or a calendar view
Select the Assessment you want to share with parents and dive into the data! You’ll see:
- Whether or not the student completed the Assessment
- The questions they encountered in game and the answer they gave
- Their score for each question
2. Send learning home with Prodigy

Parents often ask how they can support their child’s math learning at home, and the answer is easy — Prodigy Math Game!
Make sure parents know whenever students play Prodigy Math Game, they’ll be answering adaptive, skill-building math questions, whether they’re playing at home or from school.
And when parents sign up for their free Prodigy account, they get access to tools that help them:
- See what skills their child is working on
- Set a Goal for the number of questions they want their child to complete
- Send in-game Rewards when a goal is completed and motivate their child to learn more

There are two easy ways to invite parents to join Prodigy:
- Print and send home parent letters — Select the Students tab in your teacher dashboard and click Get parent letters to download a full class set of parent letters with student login information in English or Spanish. Send them home at the end of your parent teacher conference so students can learn at home
- Invite parents through email — Select the Students tab and click Invite parents. Enter the email addresses of the parents you want to connect, or copy and paste an invite link to send through your classroom management system. Parents will review an email prompting them to sign up for their free account and support their child’s learning.
When parents have the resources to support their child at home, learning soars. And when students play Prodigy Math Game at home, they’re building a lifelong love of learning!
Use Prodigy to boost learning year-round
When you use Prodigy throughout the school year, you’ll have plenty of data to share at parent teacher conferences or in quick check-ins.
Check out 10 Tips for Effective Parent Teacher Conferences for more ways to prepare before, during and after conferences. Plus, get free downloads to help things run smoothly.
Good luck — you’ve got this!