We craft activity-based learning experiences that develop critical thinking and empathy for organizations worldwide.
Watch: Why critical thinking matters more than ever
We aren't just offloading memory anymore. We're offloading thinking itself. And the generation growing up right now is paying the price.
The average human attention span has dropped to 8 seconds, shorter than a goldfish. For children raised on infinite scroll, the ability to focus deeply is eroding before it ever forms.
Tweens aged 11-14 now average 9 hours of daily screen time. That's more time on screens than sleeping, and most of it is passive consumption, not active learning.
60% of children under 12 begin using smartphones before the age of five, before their brains have developed the critical thinking skills needed to navigate what these devices deliver.
Offline, hands-on activity books designed to rebuild the skills that screens are quietly eroding. No devices needed. Just a pencil and curiosity.
A Humanly Guide to AI
42 pages of offline activities where kids explore how algorithms work, why AI gets things wrong, how to spot bias, and why their own thinking is irreplaceable. Through puzzles, creative challenges, and real questions worth sitting with.
Play, Learn and Act
A warm, matte-finish activity book that explores identity, empathy, kindness, and real-world action, through drawing, storytelling, and hands-on activities that help children build the foundational human skills no technology can replicate.
Get a glimpse of our human-centric methodology. Select your context and let ThinkHumanly generate a unique, hands-on activity idea for you.
Love this approach? Let's create something transformational together!
Every book comes with a Digital Impact Toolkit that tracks real progress in the skills that matter most.
Tracks how children improve at sequencing, debugging instructions, and building cause-and-effect thinking.
Measures growth in empathy, kindness, and positive interaction through activities like Kindness Bingo.
Assesses a child's ability to spot bias, question AI outputs, and form independent opinions.