ThinkLinks
Adaptive learning for higher ed

Learn your material,
your way.

Drop in a PDF, a video, or your own notes. ThinkLinks rebuilds it into a lesson framed around what you actually care about — then teaches it in whatever format works best for that material and for you.

Any source
PDF · video · notes · links
1 of 5+
formats chosen per concept
Seconds
to a built lesson

organic-chemistry-ch4.pdf

Reaction mechanisms · 18 pages

Ingested
Best format chosen: Flowchart

Nucleophilic substitution, step by step

1
Nucleophile approaches
2
Transition state forms
3
Leaving group departs

Framed with a Formula 1 pit-stop analogy — from your interests

How it works

From your material to your lesson

Four steps, no busywork. The student experience is simply: upload, and learn.

  1. 01

    Bring your material

    Upload or paste a PDF, drop a video file or YouTube link, or just dump your notes. ThinkLinks extracts and normalizes the content.

  2. 02

    We learn what you care about

    Your interest profile — sports, gaming, a field you love — reframes the same source into something personally relevant.

  3. 03

    The right format is chosen

    For each concept, ThinkLinks picks the single most effective way to teach it: a diagram, a curated video, restructured text, or a quick check.

  4. 04

    You get a built lesson

    A clean, focused lesson assembled in seconds — and it gets sharper as ThinkLinks learns how you actually engage.

The core capability

It picks the best way to teach — not every way

The same idea taught the wrong way is wasted effort. ThinkLinks chooses a single, well-matched format per concept, and reserves expensive generation for when it clearly pays off.

Flowchart & diagrams

Structured, sequential or process-based content

When order and cause-and-effect matter, ThinkLinks renders the steps as a clean flowchart instead of a wall of text.

Curated video

Concepts with strong existing explainers

ThinkLinks searches and ranks real videos by how well they fit the concept — and your interests — instead of regenerating what already exists.

Restructured explanation

Dense conceptual reading

Hard material is reorganized and reframed around what you care about, with diagrams dropped in where they help.

Worked examples

Procedural & skill-based content

For things you learn by doing, ThinkLinks builds step-by-step examples you can follow and then try yourself.

Quick checks

Anywhere understanding needs confirming

Short, targeted questions surface exactly where a concept hasn't landed yet — and feed back into your profile.

An orchestrator decides

A multi-agent engine analyzes each piece of content and your profile, scores every format, and assembles the lesson from the best fit — in real time.

Interest-driven

One source. A different lesson for everyone.

The same reading becomes a different lesson per student — reframed around their interests and delivered in the format that fits them best.

The same chapter

“Introduction to Recursion” — one PDF, shared with the whole class.

Maya

loves strategy games

Recursion explained as a skill tree that calls itself

Flowchart

Devon

produces music

Recursion explained as a loop sampling its own output

Restructured text
For instructors

Class-wide material, personalized per student

The standout move for educators: hand the whole class one source, and ThinkLinks turns it into a tailored lesson for each learner — then shows you how everyone's doing.

  • Share once, personalized for each

    Post one reading to the class. Every enrolled student receives their own interest-adapted version of it.

  • See what's actually landing

    Engagement and performance per student show you which concepts stuck — and which formats worked.

  • Manage courses and enrollment

    Create a course, enroll students, and link accounts. Students can still learn solo, too.

CS 101 · Section A

32 enrolled
MRMaya R.
92%
DKDevon K.
78%
PSPriya S.
85%
LTLiam T.
64%

1 reading shared → 32 personalized lessons generated

Free to start

Bring your first piece of material.

See your own reading rebuilt into a lesson made for you — in the time it takes to read this sentence.