Most schools run on too many disconnected tools. A messaging platform sits in one place, a grading system in another, then a separate parent portal, an attendance tracker, a homework log, and yet another platform for assessments and exams. Each one handles a slice of the school week, and together they create the very chaos they were meant to fix.
Weeklik, a UAE-based AI-powered school management platform, was built on a different belief: the entire school experience, for schools, teachers, students, and families, should live in one connected space. It replaces the patchwork of apps a school cycles through during the week with a single shared environment.
What makes the platform different is not only what it simplifies, but who it was designed for. Most education platforms focus on administration. Few are built around students with learning difficulties such as ADHD, dyslexia, and other diverse learning needs, and almost none place wellbeing and mental health at the center of the daily school experience.
A Decade Inside Schools, Then a New Idea
The idea came after more than a decade of work through Synapters, a UAE-based virtual tutoring center founded by Nancy Aoun and Magaly Abs. Working closely with schools, teachers, students, and parents across different education systems, the founders kept seeing the same problems: fragmented communication, administrative overload, and limited support for learners with diverse needs.
Weeklik was created to rethink how schools operate. The goal was a single intelligent platform that connects people, simplifies daily operations, and builds a more inclusive and engaging experience for every member of the school community.
The Educator Anchoring the Product
Nancy Aoun, Co-Founder and COO of Weeklik, brings more than 12 years of experience in education, academic leadership, and student support. A lifelong educator and advocate for inclusion, she has spent her career working closely with students, families, and teachers, and has built a deep understanding of the challenges that shape the learning journey.
At Weeklik, Aoun makes sure every feature is rooted in educational reality rather than administrative efficiency alone. Her view is simple: technology should adapt to the learner, not the other way around. That belief runs through one of the platform's core principles, that the students who are most often overlooked should sit at the center of the design, not on its margins.
A Designer Who Lived the Problem
For Magaly Abs, Co-Founder and CEO of Weeklik, education is personal. She experienced learning difficulties throughout her own school journey and understands firsthand what it feels like to struggle in a system that is not always built for different ways of learning. That experience became the driving force behind her mission to make sure future students get the support and opportunities they deserve.
Abs has a background in interior architecture, and she brings a design-thinking approach to education. Her logic is that just as spaces should be designed around the people who use them, school systems should be designed around learners. As co-founder of Synapters for more than a decade, she led the operational and administrative side of the organization, working closely with parents, students, teachers, and institutions.
One Platform Instead of a Stack of Apps
The promise is simple, and Weeklik keeps it that way on purpose. Schedules, planning, and the rhythm of the week sit in a single view for administrators, teachers, and families. The whole thing is powered by AI and packaged in a product the team describes as "your week, just a click away." That single-view approach is also how the founders argue the platform can keep pace with how learning is changing instead of adding another layer of friction.
Inclusivity is part of the product brief rather than a feature added later. The company positions itself as the first AI-powered school management platform designed specifically to support students with learning difficulties, with tools to push back on bullying built into the same product. The three principles the founders say guide every decision are short: smarter, kinder, connected.
Where Weeklik Is Aiming
Weeklik combines Aoun's educational background with Abs's design-driven approach, and the company is targeting three audiences directly: schools looking to modernize their operations, educators who want planning and communication tools in one place, and investors interested in inclusive edtech. The company's intake form lets each group self-identify, which gives the team a read on where its earliest traction is likely to come from.
"Can your school keep up with the future of learning?" Weeklik asks on its homepage. The product behind that question is the founders' answer: one AI-powered platform, built around a single weekly view, created by a Lebanese educator and a UAE-based designer for schools, students, and the families they serve.
Learn more about Weeklik.



