It automatically collects and organizes large, messy sets of special-education records — IEPs, evaluations, service logs, and communications — and presents them as a structured timeline that highlights what matters for advocacy.
Advocates don’t need to manually sort files, rebuild timelines, or hunt for key documents before they can begin meaningful review.
No. This is a fully simulated case built to reflect the structure and complexity of real special-education records, without using any identifiable student information.
No. You can explore the sample freely. If you later want to try this with one of your own cases, you can reach out or request access.
No. KidvoKit is designed to handle the organization and chronology of records so advocates can focus their time on analysis, interpretation, and advocacy.