Teach your child how to think.
Join the Waitlist →Designed for ages 8–18
Misinformation spreads in seconds. Algorithms reward outrage.
Children are navigating all of it without the critical thinking tools they need — and the educational system was never designed to teach them. Most parents weren't taught these skills either. The best tools your child has are the ones you give them. Enter Unothinko.
Most schools are only just beginning to teach critical thinking — and inconsistently at best. Children shouldn't have to wait for their teacher to catch up. These are skills that can be learned at home, at any pace, without needing a classroom.
The mental frameworks that let you evaluate any claim and decide for yourself. Learnable skills — at any age. Once you see how arguments work, you can't unsee it.
Children who know how to think don't just learn more — they learn better. They question what they're told, evaluate evidence, and reach their own conclusions. School teaches them what to think. Unothinko teaches them how.
Designed for ages 8–18
Learn the tricks people use to win arguments the wrong way — and how to call them out.
A claim without proof is just an opinion. Find out what makes a reason actually strong.
Numbers can lie. Discover how averages, percentages, and graphs can mislead anyone.
Not everything online is true. Learn how to check who's actually behind a claim.
Just because everyone believes something doesn't make it right. Question what you hear.
From social media to school debates — these skills work in the real world, every day.
Critical thinking is where we start. But schools leave out so much more — and most adults were never taught it either. Unothinko is building the complete curriculum that education forgot.
More subjects coming soon
Every day, your child is targeted by content designed to change how they think. The people behind it are getting better at it every year.
The tools to push back? We just forgot to teach them.
We're putting the finishing touches on Unothinko.
Want to know when we launch?