01 — Overview

What Learn To Be Does

Learn To Be is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit providing free, 1-on-1 online tutoring to underserved students across the U.S. Founded in 2008, all tutoring is delivered by trained volunteers, which means zero tutor labor cost.

02 — A Letter from Neeraj

Why We Do This

Hi everyone —

My name is Neeraj and I'm the Founder and Executive Director of Learn To Be. I started this in 2008 and worked on it on my nights and weekends until 2024. For 16 years, I volunteered my time. Thousands of hours donated to this cause I love so much. In 2024, I quit my job to go all in on Learn To Be.

Why? Because I truly believe every child can be excellent in school.

We pair underserved youth with volunteers and help kids learn the skills they'll need for decades to come: skills like learning to read, learning to write, mastering basic math.

We don't always get it right but we have the right motivation to do this work. Unlike our competitors, our mission is to help those who don't have the means. We don't have a profit motive.

What we care about is bringing the resources our more affluent students have to those who don't historically have access.

I hope you'll join us in our mission to help every child fulfill their potential.

— Neeraj
Founder, Learn To Be
03 — Scale

Scale

0
Students servedall time
0
Volunteer tutorsall time
0
Tutoring hoursall time
0
Students served2025
0
Tutoring hours2025
0
Sessions2025

5x students and 6.5x hours growth over the past five years.

04 — Track Record

Foster Youth Track Record

LTB has an existing partnership with iFoster and serves foster youth who self-identify on our application. Combined:

Foster Youth by Year

2,035
2021
2,024
2022
2,973
2023
2,888
2024
2,249
2025
870
2026
YTD

Hours of foster youth tutoring by year

YearFoster Students TutoredHours
2021200+2,035
2022160+2,024
2023225+2,973
2024170+2,888
2025165+2,249
2026 (YTD)80+870
05 — Demographics

Who We Serve

73%
Low-income studentsunable to pay or lowest tier
77%
Students of color37.6% Black, 25.4% Hispanic
21%
Students with IEPs
75%
Foster youth unable to payfor tutoring

Co-occurring hardships among our foster youth

06 — California

California Presence

0
California studentsour largest state
0
CA foster youthon the platform

Existing CA college partners: CSU Bakersfield, CSU Fresno, Cal Poly SLO, Cal Poly Humboldt, and others in the CA College Corps program.

07 — Cost Advantage

Cost Per Student

Because tutors are 100% volunteer, LTB's cost structure is fundamentally different from paid tutoring providers.

Learn To Be

Cost per tutoring hour~$8
Cost per student (40 hrs / 1 grade level)~$306
Tutor cost$0 (volunteer)

Paid Tutoring Vendor

Cost per tutoring hour$40–$80
Cost per student (40 hrs / 1 grade level)$1,600–$3,200
Tutor cost$25–$50/hr

Calculation basis (2025): ~$869K total organizational budget ÷ 111,862 tutoring hours = $7.77/hour. Budget covers staff, platform, technology, and operations, not tutor wages. 40 hours of 1-on-1 tutoring is enough to move a student up at least one grade level.

What this means for LCFF: Every dollar of supplemental/concentration grant funding goes 5–10x further with LTB than with a paid tutoring vendor. A county routing 100 foster youth to LTB for 40 hours each would cost roughly $30,600, enough to move each student up a grade level. A paid vendor would charge $160,000–$320,000 for the same.

08 — Services

What LTB Provides

09 — FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

Questions We Get Asked

QWhat grades and subjects do you cover?

We focus on K–8 in math, reading, and writing. These are overwhelmingly the subjects kids need help in, and the grades where intervention has the highest impact. A student who can read fluently, write clearly, and do math at grade level by the end of 8th grade has the foundation for everything that comes after.

We don't try to be everything to everyone. We go deep on the fundamentals because that's where the gaps are largest and where closing them matters most.

QWhat does a tutoring session actually look like, and how do you measure success?

A student and their volunteer tutor meet 1-on-1 over video (Zoom or Google Meet) on a regular schedule, typically 2–3 times per week. Sessions are structured around our curriculum: the tutor guides the student through lessons, practice problems, and reading activities tailored to where the student actually is, not where their grade level says they should be.

We measure success in three ways:

  • Self-reported data — parents and teachers report qualitative improvements: better grades, increased confidence, improved test scores. Parents can also upload report cards as supporting evidence.
  • Standardized testing (NWEA MAP) — a nationally normed adaptive assessment administered quarterly that produces objective growth scores, regardless of which state the student is in.
  • Curriculum-based mastery — our platform tracks whether a student has genuinely mastered material using spaced repetition. A lesson is considered mastered when the student can recall it reliably over 21+ days, not just pass it once.
QHow does your math tutoring work?

Every math student starts with Math Facts — our foundational fluency course covering addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division. For early grades, we measure success in correct problems per minute, building from 25 CPM in 1st grade to fluency across all four operations by 4th grade.

Beyond fluency, students work through grade-level courses built on a simple principle: mastery before advancement. A student doesn't move to the next topic until they've truly learned the current one. This is the opposite of how most schools work, where kids get pushed along whether they're ready or not.

The reason so many students struggle in math is they're missing prerequisites. A 6th grader who can't multiply isn't ready for pre-algebra, no matter what their grade level says. We identify where the gaps are and fill them first.

QWhat about reading and writing?

Reading: In early grades, we focus on phonics and measure progress in words per minute — starting at 20 WPM in kindergarten and building to 150+ WPM by 5th grade. Once students can decode fluently, the focus shifts from learning to read to reading to learn: building knowledge through history, science, geography, and literature.

Writing: We use The Writing Revolution methodology (Hochman & Wexler), which starts at the sentence level. Students master constructing a single solid sentence before moving to paragraphs. Every writing lesson is tied to a knowledge topic — science, history, social-emotional learning — so students are always writing about something substantive, not personal journal entries. The progression is explicit and sequential: fragments vs. sentences, kernel sentences, Because/But/So expansions, appositives, sentence combining, then paragraphs, then full compositions.

QHow do you compare to other tutoring providers?

The cost comparison with for-profit vendors is above — we're 5–10x more efficient because our tutors are volunteers. But we're also 2–3x more efficient than our nonprofit competitors in this space.

The difference is our team. We are a team of software engineers who bring our experience in the tech industry to the nonprofit sector. We've built our own tutoring platform, our own curriculum engine, our own mastery tracking system, and our own session verification pipeline. Most nonprofits in this space use off-the-shelf tools and manual processes. We automate what can be automated so that every dollar goes further.

QDo you offer Spanish-speaking tutors?

We have some Spanish-speaking tutors, but recruiting bilingual volunteers at scale is a real challenge. However, advances in AI have changed the equation. We now support real-time translation in our Zoom and Google Meet classrooms, which means an English-speaking tutor and a Spanish-speaking student can work together seamlessly. The translation happens live during the session, making it feel natural for both sides.

This has dramatically expanded our ability to serve Spanish-speaking families without being limited by the supply of bilingual volunteers.

QDo you offer any other programming beyond tutoring?

Our team is full of software engineers who know that AI, for all its good and bad, is here to stay. And if we don't help our families learn it, they will fall even further behind. The same students who lack access to tutoring also lack access to AI literacy.

We're developing an AI Builders program to teach students how to use AI tools responsibly and productively — not as a replacement for learning, but as a skill that will be expected of them in school and eventually in the workforce. This is a program we're actively building and considering as part of our core offering.

QHow do you handle student safety?

Safety is foundational to everything we do:

  • Background checks — every tutor 18 and older undergoes a criminal background check including sex offender registry screening before they can be matched with a student.
  • All sessions recorded — every tutoring session takes place in our monitored Zoom or Google Meet classrooms with automatic cloud recording. Recordings cannot be disabled.
  • All communication on-platform — tutors and students communicate exclusively through our platform. No private texting, no personal email, no off-platform contact.
  • Automated monitoring — we've built software that monitors session recordings and message content to flag anything concerning for human review.
  • Secure infrastructure — all data is hosted on AWS with encryption at rest and in transit, SOC 2-compliant infrastructure, and role-based access controls. We are built to meet the security and compliance requirements of school districts and county agencies.