What this is, and why we made it

We made the opposite
of what most kids see all day.

A small library of slow, wordless films from real people in 14 countries. Built over ten years. One person at a time. With no narrator telling children what to feel.

Why we exist

Curiosity,
before judgment.

Most of what children see in a day teaches them what to think. Captions, narrators, hot takes. Two seconds. Swipe.

We wanted to teach the opposite. Not what to think about a person. How to be curious about one.

Because curiosity, practiced enough, becomes a way of seeing the world. And the children we are raising are going to need it.

Reweave, the team behind Better World Ed

From us to you

Why wordless.

We chose wordless because words pre-decide what to feel. The moment a narrator says "this is the story of a brave woman who…" the child stops looking at the woman and starts trusting the narrator. The film tells them how to feel before they have a chance to feel anything themselves.

So we removed the narrator. We removed the music cues that tell you when to be sad. We removed the captions that summarize. What's left is a person, doing what they actually do, in a place that actually exists. The child has to bring their own attention. Their own questions. Their own understanding.

Then we wrote a story to go with each film. Not about the person. From them. First person. Their words. So children can hear them, then think for themselves.

"The videos with no words. You actually have to pay attention to get the understanding. The scenery, how the routine of their life just goes on. It just speaks. It speaks a lot."

A student, on watching for the first time

And we made it slow. Each film took us roughly a year. Sometimes longer. We shared meals with people. Walked their fields. Learned their kids' names. Then we filmed only what felt true. The world does not need more content. It needs more attention.

How a film gets made

A year, per person.

There is no shortcut for the kind of attention this asks for. The shape of the work, in four steps:

1.

We meet someone.

Through community connections, through travel, through people we trust. We sit with them. Sometimes for weeks. We ask if they want to share their life with the children of the world.

2.

They tell us their story.

In their own language. Their own words. We translate. We do not edit for tidiness. We keep the strange specifics, the small details, the moments they pause.

3.

We film their day.

Wordless. No staged scenes. Whatever they would have done if we were not there. Sometimes we film for one day. Sometimes for a week. We use what feels true.

4.

It joins the library.

Slowly, over many revisions. We send them a draft. They tell us what to fix. They are paid for their work. They keep the right to be removed at any time.

From people who use this

Real voices.

Educators, students, and learning researchers around the world. Not curated quotes. Real ones.

Tony Wagner

"Better World Ed is breaking new ground in teaching students essential 21st century skills while also developing their capacity for empathy, all while practicing literacy and numeracy in an important way."

Tony Wagner Senior Research Fellow, Learning Policy Institute
A teacher

"The beauty of this is that it's not an additional 'thing' to teach. It is how we build the capacity of our learners to engage with and impact the world through existing curriculum."

A district curriculum supervisor

A student

"This is the first time in my life I feel like I'm not being told what to think."

A 5th grade student

A teacher

"One of my more challenging students is now one of the kindest people I know. He has shared with me how good he feels after doing the lessons."

A 5th grade educator

"I like how the films teach us all these big subjects at once. Writing, math, reading, kindness. And we get to explore the whole world without leaving our classroom."

A student

"I like that these lessons are mirrors for some and windows for others. Not just all windows or all mirrors. And often the roles reverse and the student becomes the teacher."

A teacher

The bigger family

Better World Ed is one of two things we make.

We are a tiny team at Reweave, a registered nonprofit. We make two products, both rooted in the same idea: that curiosity, practiced early, is the most useful thing a child can carry into the world.

For educators

Better World Ed

The platform you are looking at now. Wordless films, written stories, and tools for teachers and families. Built to live alongside the math, literacy, and life lessons children are already learning.

You're already here

For children

Reweave

An adventure game on iOS and Android, made for kids. Same wordless films at its center, but framed as a quiet exploration the children can navigate themselves. Each screen is a small choice.

Coming soon to your phone

Reweave, Inc. is a registered 501(c)(3) nonprofit based in the United States, serving educators in over 30 countries. The films and stories belong to the people in them. We license, never own.

Open a window
tomorrow.

Free to start. Two minutes to set up. Your first film is free.