Quran — tajweed, memorisation, and love of the Book
Memorisation plans, tajweed progression, daily review systems, and age-appropriate starting points. The goal is a lifelong relationship with the Quran, not a race to finish.
How we approach Quran
A daily review cycle is more important than how many surahs a child memorises.
Short surahs through listening and repetition. No tajweed rules yet — just beautiful recitation as a model. The child absorbs the sounds. An-Nas, Al-Falaq, Al-Ikhlas, Al-Masad, An-Nasr come first.
Longer surahs (Ad-Duha to Al-Balad). Tajweed rules introduced gradually. Daily review of previously memorised content is the key to retention. The Quran Memorization Log tracks this cycle.
Full juz or more. Independent review by the child. Tafsir of the surahs they have memorised. Connection between Quran and daily life.
Ayahs memorised today are reviewed tomorrow, next week, next month, and next quarter. Without this cycle, memorisation fades. Our Quran Memorization Log has built-in review columns.
Shaykh Mahmoud Khalil Al-Hussary's recitation is our standard — clear, precise, and beautiful. For tajweed, we use the resources recommended by Markaz Ibn Al-Qayyim.
Consistency over intensity. 5 minutes every day is better than 30 minutes once a week. The Quran Memorization Log works with any pace.
Track every surah.
A printable log with memorisation, review, and parent-check columns. Designed for the review cycle that actually works.