Features

What is a Takhti & our 'one-letter' rhythm?

A takhti is a compact learning exercise: tracing, sound drills, visual cards, and a tiny home activity. For Play Group, each takhti focuses on a single letter — taught, practiced, and reinforced — before moving forward.

TG

Play Group Method — One Letter a Day

Daily short sessions (30 to 40 minutes each) with multi-sensory inputs — visual, auditory, kinesthetic — followed by a 2–3 minute parent-led home practice using our audio prompts.

Learning Journey — step-by-step

1
Letter recognition (Play Group)

Letter shape, sound, tracing & takhti activity.

2
Joining & reading (KG)

Combining letters to read simple words and short verses.

3
Short Surahs & fluency (Prep)

Practice with short surahs; tajweed basics introduced.

4
Hifz & mastery

Graduates move onto structured memorization and refined tajweed; by program completion students are able to recite full Quran fluently (timeline varies by student pace).

Memory-friendly

Micro-lessons suit young attention spans and promote long-term retention.

Teacher guided

Classroom practice reinforced by stepwise takhti worksheets.

Audio aid

High-quality recitation recordings for accurate imitation at home.

Interactive Tools & Classroom Methods

We combine traditional takhti practice with modern aids — audio recitations, interactive boards, visual flashcards, small-group recitation, and short parent-led home drills.

Recitation Library

Age-appropriate audio recitations broken down by takhti and surah.

Smart Board Tracing

Interactive tracing exercises boost fine motor skills & letter formation.

Small Group Practice

3–5 children practice together under directed teacher feedback.

Guided Reading

Progressive reading sessions move students from letters to fluent verses.

Parent Prompts

Daily 2–3 minute suggestions parents can follow at home.

Progress Badges

Children receive small rewards as they complete takhtis and milestones.

Stories from our community

"My daughter started with the Play Group takhtis. Today she reads short surahs with clear tajweed — we could not be prouder."

— Mrs. Khan (Parent)

"The one-letter rhythm really works. Small wins every day keep children motivated."

— Mr. Ahmed (Teacher)

"After a year my son started reading fluently; the audio guides were a huge help at home."

— Ms. Sara (Parent)

FAQ

What age for Play Group?
Play Group (3–4 years). Activities are age-appropriate and short to keep engagement high.
How long to finish Quran?
Completion time varies. With consistent class attendance and home practice, students progress to full recitation over years with regular Hifz and tajweed support.
Do we provide certificates?
Yes — students receive milestone certificates and a final program completion certificate upon meeting fluency & recitation criteria.