Grade 1–12

International

Independently authored curriculum aligned to Cambridge Primary, Lower Secondary, and Upper Secondary frameworks. Covers 8 subjects across Grades 1–12. Explores questions like: Why do civilisations rise and fall? How does particle theory explain the states of matter? What is algebra really for?

Computing

  • Computing Grade 1 You'll discover what computers actually do and learn to tell the difference between digital and non-digital tools.By exploring input and output devices, starting up computers, and saving your own files, you'll gain real hands-on control over technology.
  • Computing Grade 2 You'll learn how computers follow instructions by breaking down tasks into steps, fixing mixed-up sequences, and creating simple programs in Scratch that respond when things happen—like a character moving when you click.
  • Computing Grade 3 You'll learn to build programs that repeat actions with loops, spot and fix mistakes in code, and use events to trigger what happens next.You'll also break down real problems into smaller steps and organize information in spreadsheets—skills that help you think like a programmer.
  • Computing Grade 4 You'll learn to write programs that make decisions, use variables to remember information, and build interactive games that respond to what players do—while discovering how computers actually work under the hood.
  • Computing Grade 5 You'll learn how computers actually store and organize information—from variables that remember data to binary code that powers everything digital—then use that knowledge to build spreadsheets, write loops that repeat tasks smartly, and understand why different file types exist.
  • Computing Grade 6 You'll learn to write your own named procedures to organize code, read flowcharts with decision points, and debug programs when things go wrong.You'll also discover how computers actually store images as pixels and sound as samples—breaking down how digital media really works.
  • Computing Grade 7 You'll learn to write programs that actually do things—storing information in variables, taking input from users, and creating loops that repeat tasks automatically.By the end, you'll understand how computers organize different types of data and manipulate text, giving you the foundation to build real programs.
  • Computing Grade 8 You'll write programs that actually do useful things—looping through data, building lists, manipulating text, and creating reusable functions that solve real problems.By the end, you'll have the core skills to automate tasks and think like a programmer.
  • Computing Grade 9 You'll write programs that actually do useful things by mastering functions, lists, and search techniques—building the foundational skills that separate beginners from people who can solve real problems with code.
  • Computing Grade 10 Learn how computers actually store and manipulate data by exploring binary arithmetic, number systems, and how text and images get translated into the 1s and 0s that machines understand—skills that reveal why digital files work the way they do.
  • Computing Grade 11 You'll learn how computers find and organize data efficiently by studying four essential algorithms and analyzing why some approaches dramatically outpace others—skills that separate competent programmers from those who can optimize real systems.
  • Computing Grade 12 You'll explore the data structures and algorithmic thinking that power everything from undo buttons to search engines, learning when to use stacks and queues, how recursion works, and why some solutions are dramatically faster than others through Big-O analysis.

Digital Literacy

  • Digital Literacy Grade 1 First graders learn to identify computer parts and the difference between digital and non-digital tools, then practice hands-on skills like using a mouse, touchscreen, and keyboard to navigate devices and complete simple tasks.
  • Digital Literacy Grade 2 Students learn to take and organize digital photos, type using the home row keys, understand what makes computers work, search the internet safely with guidance, and recognize why keeping personal information private matters online.
  • Digital Literacy Grade 3 You'll learn how to search the internet safely, spot trustworthy websites from sketchy ones, and understand how the web actually works.You'll also build touch-typing skills and create your own digital art.
  • Digital Literacy Grade 4 You'll learn how computers actually work, organize files like a pro, and figure out which search results you can actually trust.You'll also explore spreadsheets and discover why things you post online can stick around forever.
  • Digital Literacy Grade 5 You'll learn to think like a programmer by writing code with blocks, spotting and fixing bugs, and creating polished documents and presentations that actually look professional—skills that show up everywhere from school projects to real jobs.
  • Digital Literacy Grade 6 You'll learn to break down complex problems into manageable steps, create flowcharts to plan your thinking, build interactive projects in Scratch, and use spreadsheet formulas to analyze real data and create charts that tell a story.
  • Digital Literacy Grade 7 You'll learn to think like a programmer by writing code and using flowcharts to solve problems, then apply those same logical skills to spot fake information and understand how data shapes what you see online.
  • Digital Literacy Grade 8 You'll learn how to work with data like a programmer—using spreadsheets and databases to organize information, spot patterns, and answer real questions.Along the way, you'll also develop a critical eye for misinformation online and understand how functions and variables actually work under the hood.
  • Digital Literacy Grade 9 You'll learn how algorithms actually work in the apps and websites you use daily, explore why some run faster than others, and discover how AI systems make decisions behind the scenes—plus how to work with data visualizations and APIs to build your own projects.
  • Digital Literacy Grade 10 Learn how encryption actually protects your data online and why social engineering remains one of the easiest ways to compromise security.You'll explore the difference between symmetric and asymmetric encryption, understand SSL/TLS certificates, and analyze real data breaches to see what happens when security fails.
  • Digital Literacy Grade 11 Explore how AI systems actually learn, why they can perpetuate bias, and what safeguards exist—or don't—to keep them accountable.You'll examine real ethical dilemmas in AI deployment and grapple with what regulation should look like in a rapidly evolving field.
  • Digital Literacy Grade 12 You'll examine how AI systems actually work, why their decisions matter, and who should be responsible when things go wrong—exploring real algorithmic bias cases, the tension between AI-generated and human content, and the governance frameworks trying to keep pace with the technology.

English

  • English Grade 1 First graders learn to decode words by recognizing letters and their sounds, blending simple three-letter words, and mastering common letter pairs like "ch" and "sh." By the end, they'll read basic sentences and build the foundation for fluent reading.
  • English Grade 2 Second graders learn to tackle trickier letter combinations like blends and long vowel patterns, building the fluency to read longer stories smoothly.They'll practice understanding what they read by answering questions about texts and exploring both fiction and non-fiction books.
  • English Grade 3 You'll learn to read like a detective, uncovering what characters really feel and why they act the way they do, while building the skills to predict what happens next, pull out important information, and explain stories in your own words.
  • English Grade 4 You'll learn to dig deeper into what you read—finding main ideas, figuring out what authors really mean, and understanding how word choices shape a story's mood and message.By comparing different texts, you'll discover how writers make their work unique.
  • English Grade 5 You'll learn to read like a detective, spotting how writers choose their words to create effects, comparing different authors' styles, and separating fact from opinion in what you read.You'll also dig into poetry to understand how rhythm and structure shape meaning, and develop research skills to find reliable information from multiple sources.
  • English Grade 6 You'll learn to read like a detective, spotting bias and unreliable sources while comparing how different writers tackle the same ideas.By analyzing language choices and text structure, you'll understand why writers make specific decisions—and evaluate whether those choices actually work.
  • English Grade 7 You'll learn to read like a detective—spotting what authors directly tell you and what they hint at—while discovering how word choices create mood and meaning.You'll also master strategies to find information fast and tell fact from opinion, skills that work in any subject.
  • English Grade 8 You'll learn to read like a writer—spotting how word choice, sentence structure, and text organization create meaning and emotion.You'll compare themes across different texts, decode bias in media, and write thoughtful analytical responses that go beyond surface-level reading.
  • English Grade 9 You'll learn to read like a critic—spotting how writers build arguments, comparing ideas across multiple texts, and questioning whether sources are trustworthy.These skills prepare you for IGCSE exams and help you navigate information in the real world.
  • English Grade 10 You'll learn to read beneath the surface of texts, tracking both what authors say directly and what they hint at through word choice and tone, then back up your interpretations with precise evidence from the page.
  • English Grade 11 You'll develop the close reading skills that separate surface-level understanding from genuine literary insight, learning to analyze how writers craft language and structure for specific effects.You'll compare how different authors approach the same themes, evaluate competing perspectives, and practice timed comprehension under realistic exam conditions.
  • English Grade 12 You'll analyze how writers and speakers construct arguments, examining everything from rhetorical devices to logical fallacies, then apply those skills to unfamiliar texts across multiple genres and forms.

Global Perspectives

  • Global Perspectives Grade 1 Young learners discover how to be curious about the world around them by asking questions, searching for answers, and learning that people can see the same thing in different ways.Through sharing what they find, they build the foundation for understanding that many questions have more than one right answer.
  • Global Perspectives Grade 2 You'll learn how to ask good questions about the world around you, tell the difference between what you already know and what's brand new, and explain your ideas with real reasons instead of just guesses.Along the way, you'll discover how to find information from different sources and work together with classmates to explore big ideas.
  • Global Perspectives Grade 3 You'll learn how to investigate real-world questions by gathering information from different sources, organizing what you find, and sharing your discoveries with others—all while discovering how people around the world see things differently than you do.
  • Global Perspectives Grade 4 You'll learn how to dig into real-world questions by gathering information from different sources, spotting what makes each one unique, and sharing what you discover with others—skills that help you understand how events in your community connect to the wider world.
  • Global Perspectives Grade 5 You'll learn to spot patterns in real-world data, figure out why sources exist, and dig into issues from different angles—then explain what you've discovered in a clear, organized way.
  • Global Perspectives Grade 6 Learn to spot bias, evaluate sources, and understand why the same event looks different depending on who's telling the story—skills that help you make sense of news, social media, and the world around you.
  • Global Perspectives Grade 7 You'll learn how to ask good questions about the world, dig up reliable evidence to answer them, and explain what you found in a clear research report—skills that turn curiosity into real understanding.
  • Global Perspectives Grade 8 You'll learn how to investigate global issues by evaluating sources critically, understanding how framing shapes what we know, and building arguments that actually hold up to scrutiny.By the end, you'll be able to research real-world problems and defend your conclusions with solid evidence.
  • Global Perspectives Grade 9 You'll learn to design and conduct your own research investigations, from formulating questions to synthesizing multiple perspectives into a coherent argument.By the end, you'll produce a substantial research report that demonstrates how to evaluate sources critically and acknowledge the limits of your own inquiry.
  • Global Perspectives Grade 10 You'll learn to research real global issues—from climate change to inequality—and develop your own informed perspective by connecting personal experiences to worldwide problems.Through planning, drafting, and peer feedback, you'll build the skills to write persuasive reports that matter.
  • Global Perspectives Grade 11 You'll learn to research real global issues, evaluate sources critically, and build arguments backed by strong evidence—skills that turn curiosity into credible analysis you can defend and refine.
  • Global Perspectives Grade 12 You'll conduct original research on a global issue, learn to evaluate evidence from competing perspectives, and develop the critical thinking skills needed to form informed positions on complex world problems.

Humanities

  • Humanities Grade 1 Young learners explore how weather shapes where people live, track the seasons, create their first maps, and discover how life has changed over time—building the foundation for understanding the world around them.
  • Humanities Grade 2 Second graders learn to read maps like detectives, using compass directions and map keys to find their way around their own community and beyond.They'll discover how to describe routes to places that matter to them and explore the lives of important historical figures who shaped the world around them.
  • Humanities Grade 3 You'll become a geography detective and time traveler, learning to navigate maps with an atlas, locate the seven continents and five oceans, and understand how hemispheres and the equator divide our planet.You'll also master reading timelines and the BC/AD system, so you can place historical events exactly where they belong in time.
  • Humanities Grade 4 You'll learn to read maps like a geographer, measure real distances using scale bars, and explore how climate shapes where people live around the world.Then dive into Ancient Greece or Rome to discover how these civilizations built the foundations of Western culture.
  • Humanities Grade 5 Explore how geography shapes human life by studying latitude, longitude, and world biomes, then discover why ancient civilizations thrived where they did and how trade connected distant peoples across the globe.
  • Humanities Grade 6 Explore how medieval societies organized trade across continents, navigate maps using grid references and scale, and place historical events on timelines to understand how the past connects to geography and human movement.
  • Humanities Grade 7 Explore how civilizations beyond Europe shaped world history, from ancient empires to modern societies.You'll learn to question historical sources, compare different power systems, and understand why non-Western perspectives are essential to the full story of humanity.
  • Humanities Grade 8 You'll examine colonialism from multiple angles—exploring why empires expanded, how it shaped global inequality, and what historians actually debate about its legacy.You'll also trace how urbanization transformed societies, using real evidence to build your own interpretations of these pivotal historical forces.
  • Humanities Grade 9 Explore how 20th-century conflicts shaped our world, from world wars to the Cold War, while learning to build evidence-based arguments about power, rights, and global connection.You'll analyze what makes events historically significant and how they still matter today.

Math

  • Mathematics Grade 1 First graders build a foundation for all future math by learning how numbers work: understanding tens and ones, comparing quantities, and discovering the hidden pairs that make numbers up to 10.You'll count to 100, read and write numbers, and start seeing patterns that make math make sense.
  • Mathematics Grade 2 Second graders build fluency with two-digit numbers—understanding how tens and ones work together, adding and subtracting with strategy, and discovering patterns like odd and even.You'll develop mental math skills that make real-world counting and problem-solving faster and easier.
  • Mathematics Grade 3 You'll build a solid foundation in working with larger numbers—understanding how hundreds, tens, and ones fit together, then using that knowledge to add, subtract, multiply, and divide with confidence and speed.
  • Mathematics Grade 4 By the end of Grade 4, you'll work confidently with numbers up to 10,000, master multiplication and division strategies, and develop the mental math skills that make everyday calculations feel natural.
  • Mathematics Grade 5 You'll build a strong foundation in numbers by mastering place value up to the millions, working with decimals, and understanding how multiplication and division by powers of 10 work.You'll also explore factors, multiples, and prime numbers, then apply these skills to add and subtract decimals with confidence.
  • Mathematics Grade 6 You'll master the math skills that unlock everything from cooking to coding: multiplying and dividing decimals, working with negative numbers, using order of operations, and understanding ratios and proportions.You'll also start thinking algebraically, learning to solve problems with unknown values instead of just calculating known ones.
  • Mathematics Grade 7 You'll master the number skills that unlock higher math: working with negative numbers and integers, finding factors and multiples, understanding powers and roots, and converting fluently between fractions, decimals, and percentages.These tools let you solve real problems involving discounts, ratios, and comparisons.
  • Mathematics Grade 8 You'll master the mathematical tools that connect algebra to real-world problems—from writing huge numbers in standard form to solving proportion questions about recipes and rates, while learning the index laws that make complex calculations manageable.
  • Mathematics Grade 9 You'll work with numbers and expressions that go beyond basic algebra—learning to simplify surds, handle fractional and negative powers, and find exact values using upper and lower bounds.These tools let you solve real problems more precisely and prepare you for advanced mathematics.
  • Mathematics Grade 10 You'll learn to read the language of functions—from linear to quadratic to more complex curves—and use graphs to solve real problems like calculating speed, distance, and motion.By the end, you'll see how equations and their visual shapes reveal patterns hidden in everything from physics to economics.
  • Mathematics Grade 11 You'll work with matrices to solve real systems of equations and transform geometric shapes, master advanced algebraic techniques like completing the square, and develop fluency with surds and exponent rules that unlock higher mathematics.
  • Mathematics Grade 12 You'll master the mathematical tools that unlock calculus and higher mathematics: polynomial operations, exponential and logarithmic functions, and differentiation rules that let you analyze how things change.These skills form the foundation for everything from physics to economics.

Science

  • Science Grade 1 Young scientists learn to observe the world carefully, use their five senses to explore, and sort things into living and non-living groups.You'll practice asking questions about nature and recording what you discover, building the foundation for scientific thinking.
  • Science Grade 2 Young scientists learn to ask questions they can actually test, design fair experiments to answer them, and record what they discover in tables so they can spot patterns.You'll explore what plants need to thrive and practice the real thinking tools that scientists use every day.
  • Science Grade 3 You'll learn how scientists actually test ideas by changing one thing at a time, collecting real data, and figuring out what it means—then spotting ways to do it better next time.
  • Science Grade 4 You'll learn how scientists actually work—measuring carefully, recording data, and drawing conclusions from what you find.You'll also explore how your digestive system breaks down food, then graph real measurements to prove your ideas.
  • Science Grade 5 You'll learn how scientists actually think—forming predictions, testing them with proper sample sizes, and reading data from scatter graphs to spot real patterns.You'll also explore how your body's organ systems work together to keep you alive.
  • Science Grade 6 You'll learn how scientists actually test ideas by controlling variables, analyzing data with graphs and statistics, and drawing conclusions from evidence.You'll also practice using dichotomous keys to identify organisms and spot when data doesn't fit the pattern.
  • Science Grade 7 You'll learn how scientists actually think by designing fair tests, collecting real data, and drawing conclusions from evidence rather than guesses.Along the way, you'll explore plant and animal cells and discover how to ask the right questions about the natural world.
  • Science Grade 8 Learn how scientists actually test their ideas by designing experiments, spotting when results go wrong, and figuring out what went wrong and why.You'll explore how your lungs and body use oxygen, then apply these skills to real experimental challenges.
  • Science Grade 9 You'll learn to think like a scientist by mastering measurement precision, spotting flaws in experiments, and understanding how your nervous system processes the world around you—skills that separate solid science from sloppy conclusions.
  • Science Grade 10 You'll learn how scientists actually test ideas—designing experiments with proper controls, collecting data that means something, and presenting findings so others can understand and verify your work.Along the way, you'll explore how cells specialize to do different jobs in living organisms.
  • Science Grade 11 You'll learn how scientists actually know what they know—by mastering uncertainty, error analysis, and critical evaluation of research methods—while exploring how organisms maintain stability through excretion and homeostasis.
  • Science Grade 12 You'll learn to design rigorous experiments, interpret complex graphs, and evaluate whether scientific claims actually hold up—skills that separate people who understand science from people who just read headlines about it.

Wellbeing

  • Wellbeing Grade 1 First graders learn to name their feelings, discover that all emotions are normal and okay, and practice calming strategies they can use when they feel upset.They also explore why sleep and rest matter for their bodies and minds, and build healthy habits like hand washing.
  • Wellbeing Grade 2 Second graders learn to name feelings beyond happy and sad, notice where emotions show up in their bodies, and practice calming strategies they can actually use.They also explore what triggers their feelings and develop a stronger sense of body autonomy and personal boundaries.
  • Wellbeing Grade 3 Third graders learn what it takes to bounce back when things get hard—from setting goals they actually care about to handling stress in ways that work.You'll explore what resilience really means, recognize bullying, and build strategies you can use right now.
  • Wellbeing Grade 4 You'll discover your personal strengths, set goals that actually work, learn how to bounce back from mistakes, and practice the empathy skills that make friendships stronger and more meaningful.
  • Wellbeing Grade 5 You'll learn how to make decisions that feel right for you, recognize when friends are pressuring you in different ways, and practice speaking up for yourself without being mean.These skills help you build stronger friendships and handle tricky social situations with confidence.
  • Wellbeing Grade 6 Moving to secondary school brings real changes—new buildings, new people, new routines.This course helps you understand what makes transitions challenging, recognize your own strengths to lean on, and develop practical ways to manage the anxiety that often comes with big changes.
  • Wellbeing Grade 7 Discover what actually affects your wellbeing—from stress and sleep to emotions and relationships—and learn practical ways to support your mental health when things feel tough or confusing.
  • Wellbeing Grade 8 You'll learn practical mental health strategies backed by research, assess your own wellbeing, and create a personalized plan for staying healthy.The course also covers when and how to seek help early, plus the basics of sexual reproduction.
  • Wellbeing Grade 9 You'll explore what resilience actually means and learn a practical model for building it in your own life, then discover how people can grow stronger after difficult experiences.Along the way, you'll reflect on your own resilience and understand why asking for help is a sign of strength, not weakness.

Ready to start learning?

Join the waitlist