Most Nigerian parents who put a child through university, polytechnic or college of education ask the same quiet question: am I helping enough? You paid the school fees. You paid the hostel. You sent provisions. But the actual studying — the bit that decides whether your child graduates with a Second Class Upper or a Pass — happens in a hostel room or library you cannot see, with lecturers you do not know, on a curriculum you do not have time to learn.
CampusTutor is the lever you can pull. A subscription gives your child a tutor that knows their institution, knows their course, and is available at the hours when your child is actually studying. Plus, Pro and Premium plans unlock unlimited tutoring, exam practice and CGPA tools at Naira prices designed to be affordable for Nigerian households.
The platform is built around academic integrity. It is a tutor — not an essay generator. It explains, walks through worked examples, drills topics with quiz questions, and forecasts your child's CGPA from their actual mastery. It does not write their assignments. The investment you make here supports the habit of study, not the shortcut around it.
Privacy is symmetric: you can pay for the plan and receive the receipt, but you do not see your child's chat history or grades inside CampusTutor. That confidentiality is what makes them comfortable enough to use it honestly — and a tutor that gets honest use is far more valuable than one your child performs for.
For families with multiple students at different schools (a senior at UNILAG, a younger sibling at FUOYE, another doing NCE at AOCOED), the same CampusTutor account model works across institution types. Each student sets their own academic profile; content calibrates automatically.