Start with student-friendly word meaning and examples.
Parrivo gives students a repeatable path: learn the word, use it in a sentence, read it in context, write with it, review, and finish with a unit check.
Each word moves from recognition to real use, so students do more than memorize a definition.
A unit combines 9 activity types plus a unit assessment, keeping vocabulary, reading, writing, review, and progress in one student workspace.
Even after the storm damaged the garden, Mia stayed resilient and replanted each row.
Start with student-friendly word meaning and examples.
Connect sound, spelling, and word form.
Check whether the definition is clear.
Use sentence clues to understand meaning.
Compare related words and ideas.
Meet vocabulary inside a short passage.
Use the word in a complete sentence.
Write original responses with vocabulary.
Return to words through active review.
Check understanding before moving on.
Parrivo keeps progress visible without turning the page into a one-time test score.
Review games bring words back after initial practice so students see them again before the unit assessment.
The unit assessment checks vocabulary understanding after students have practiced meaning, context, reading, and writing.
Completion states, activity progress, XP, streaks, review, and quiz signals help families understand what was practiced.
Most students should begin with their current school grade, then adjust if the work feels too easy or too hard.
Yes. Parrivo organizes vocabulary practice from Grade 1 through Grade 12, so the school grade is the clearest starting point.
Move down if the words, sentence work, or short reading feel frustrating. The goal is steady use, not guessing.
Move up when students can understand the words, explain them in context, and use them in writing with confidence.
These answers summarize the Parrivo learning flow and where students should begin.