Open the library, pick today's article.
Take the recommendation, or choose your own.
Shorts and TikToks are rewiring how children think, or whether they think at all. Attention spans collapse. Curiosity flattens into scroll. The muscle that asks why gets weaker every week it isn't used.
Nbeeeh is the deliberate opposite. Quiet, slow, handwritten, and built to grow the part of the mind the feed is eating.
To give children back the curiosity the feed takes away.
Not trivia, not memorization. The capacity to sit with an idea, hold it, and turn it over.
Shorts and TikToks are not neutral entertainment. They are training children to need a new stimulus every eight seconds. Nbeeeh trains the opposite reflex.
A generation that types everything on a screen has lost the ability to write a clean sentence by hand. Nbeeeh fixes that by accident, every single day.
An 8-year-old gets an article her brain can hold. A 14-year-old gets one that makes him work. A teen who reads Arabic better than English gets the Arabic version. The library bends to the reader, not the other way around.
A child who has read about Andalusia, photosynthesis, Ibn Khaldun, and the water cycle can join any conversation at the table and hold their ground.
Every one of the five daily questions is written to push past recall into judgment. What did the author leave out? What would change if this happened today? Do you agree? You can't fake your way through that with a swipe.
The grandfather in our family has spent forty years saying the same thing: what the hand writes, the mind keeps. We finally listened.
We have nothing to sell you. No subscription, no premium tier, no upsells, no analytics, no data partners, no ads. Nbeeeh is free while we're getting it right.
Built by a family of five. Tested on two daughters. Read by anyone who wants in. A grandfather who insisted on the notebook. A father. A mother. Two daughters who are the first and harshest editors of every article.
Open Nbeeeh and you'll see a library of short articles in Arabic and English. The system recommends one for the day, based on what your child has already read and how old they are. They can take the recommendation, or browse and pick something else.
They read it, then write it into their own notebook by hand, either copying the parts that struck them, or summarizing the whole thing in their own words. Then they answer five questions designed to stretch comprehension into thinking.
The library spans science, history, geography, art, biography, culture, and technology. Not one narrow lane. A child who reads Nbeeeh for a year has touched the surface of every subject that matters, and gone deep on a few.
Take the recommendation, or choose your own.
By hand, in any notebook you already own.
Each one written to push past recall into real thinking.
Not now, not at any subscriber count. Not in a footer, not in a sidebar, not snuck into an article.
We don't run analytics on what your child reads, when they read, or how long it took.
Miss a week. Miss a month. The notebook waits. What we keep is a quiet record of what they've read, not a counter designed to pressure them.
No AI-generated filler. No content mills. A person chose this for your child today, and a person wrote the questions.
Forty short videos before breakfast and they can't remember any of them by lunch. Lose interest in a book after two pages. Handwriting that looks like a six-year-old's, no matter how old they are. They flinch away from conversations about anything that isn't trending.
A full notebook on the shelf, in their own handwriting, and that handwriting is now legible, even beautiful, because they've practiced it 365 times. They can summarize an article from March. They start sentences with I was reading about. They ask harder questions at dinner. They hold their ground when an adult underestimates them.
I learned the Quran by writing it. I learned English by writing it. I learned everything I still know by writing it. My granddaughters were learning on screens that forgot them as soon as they closed. So we made this.
Nothing else. That's the whole product.
You supply the notebook and pen. That part is yours.
Unedited.
i thought my son will hate it honestly. but because its short, he actually did it. not everyday perfect, we forget sometimes, but when he writes the answers i can see he is thinking more than before.
My daughter used to read and finish fast just to say she finished. Now she stops and ask me words, and sometimes she tells me ‘wait i have an opinion about this.’ It sounds small but for us its big.
We are not a perfect reading family. Some days there is school, tiredness, drama, everything. But Nbeeeh made reading feel possible again. one article, notebook, done.
Honestly i liked that there is no points and no streaks. My kids already have enough things shouting at them. This feels calm. They read, they write, and nobody is making them feel bad.
After a while the notebook became the nice part. messy handwriting, spelling mistakes, weird opinions, all of it. But it is theirs. I would rather see that than another hour gone on videos.
Free, while we're getting started. If that ever changes, you'll know first, and you'll have a long runway to decide.
Start free →