AI Tutoring Platform

Your personal
tutor,
always on.

An AI tutor you actually talk to — start free. Epivo asks the questions, challenges your thinking, and guides you to understanding — not answers.

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Learning that actually works

Voice-first tutoring

Just talk. Epivo listens and responds in real time — hands-free, on your phone.

Teaches you to think

Epivo doesn't lecture — it asks questions, challenges assumptions, and helps you reason through ideas yourself.

Structured courses

Curated courses from philosophy and world history to national school curricula — each with clear progression, prerequisites, and mastery tracking.

Remembers where you left off

Epivo tracks your mastery across sessions — what you know, what needs work, and even your personal interests and learning style.

What makes Epivo different

A voice-first AI tutor that combines the engagement of a real conversation with the accountability of knowing what you've actually learned — across every subject, for every age, available anywhere.

What you can learn

For curious minds

All ages

Psychology of Well-Being

What actually makes people thrive? Dive into the science behind happiness, habits, and behaviour change — from positive psychology and cognitive science to relationships, meaning-making, and mind-body practices. Practical, evidence-based, and designed for anyone curious about living better.

All ages

AI Literacy

From pattern recognition to deepfakes, five courses that give you conceptual fluency in artificial intelligence — what it is, how it learns, how to use it, and what it means for your career and society. Designed for professionals who want to understand AI without writing a line of code.

All ages

Build with AI

Learn to build production software with AI — no coding required. Based on a proven methodology used to build SaaS platforms, corporate websites, and financial systems. Covers AI fundamentals, process architecture, deployment, and team-of-one workflows. Explores questions like: How do you ensure quality without reading code? How does one person do the work of fifty?

All ages

Clear Thinking

From spotting logical fallacies to navigating misleading statistics and media manipulation, this curriculum builds the practical reasoning skills every adult needs. Explores questions like: Why do smart people fall for bad arguments? How can a graph tell the truth and lie at the same time? What makes you change your mind — and what should?

All ages

Language Learning

Language learning courses — enrolled via learning plan like academic courses

All ages

Practical Psychology

Applied psychological science for everyday life — from how you make decisions and navigate difficult conversations to why groups behave the way they do. Covers decision science, communication skills, social influence, human development across the lifespan, and workplace psychology. Grounded in peer-reviewed research from Kahneman, Cialdini, Piaget, Edmondson, and others.

All ages

Spanish Language

Spanish language learning through conversational practice — situation-based curriculum with Track A (transactional) and Track B (social) progression.

Philosophy

All ages

Western Philosophy

Explore the big questions that have shaped human thought — from Plato's cave and Aristotle's ethics to Descartes' radical doubt, Kant's moral law, and existentialism. Follow the ideas that challenged authority, redefined justice, and still influence how we think about knowledge, freedom, and the good life.

All ages

Chinese Philosophy

Three thousand years of philosophical thought — from Confucius and Laozi to Mao, Wang Yangming, and contemporary thinkers. Explores the questions Chinese philosophy asks that Western philosophy rarely does: Is human nature good? What is the Way? Can universal love be a political programme? Rigorous, critically grounded, and presented without ideological lens.

All ages

Indian Philosophy

From the Vedic hymns to Ambedkar's critique of caste — three thousand years of Indian philosophical thought. Explores Brahman and Atman, the heterodox challengers (Buddhism, Jainism), the six orthodox schools, the Vedanta debates of Shankara, Ramanuja, and Madhva, the devotional poetry of Mirabai and Kabir, and the modern thinkers who brought Indian philosophy into dialogue with the world.

All ages

African Philosophy

From Maat and Ifa divination to Fanon and Mbembe -- three thousand years of African philosophical thought. Explores Ubuntu ethics, Yoruba and Akan metaphysics, Pan-African political philosophy, and the decolonial critique that reshaped how the world thinks about knowledge and power. A continent's philosophy on its own terms.

All ages

Islamic Philosophy

Fourteen centuries of Islamic philosophical inquiry — from the House of Wisdom's translation movement to contemporary feminist and decolonial thought. Explores the great debates: Can reason demonstrate God's existence? Does al-Ghazali's Tahafut refute Aristotelian science? What does Avicenna's Flying Man reveal about self-consciousness? Traces rationalist falsafa, Sufi mystical metaphysics, political philosophy, and global dialogue across Arabic, Persian, and Urdu intellectual traditions.

All ages

Japanese Philosophy

From Shinto's sacred landscapes through samurai ethics and Zen aesthetics to the Kyoto School's radical encounter with Western thought. Traces how Japanese thinkers transformed Buddhist, Confucian, and indigenous ideas into a distinctive philosophical tradition — and asks what Nishida's pure experience and Dogen's being-time reveal about consciousness, nature, and what it means to be human.

All ages

Jewish Philosophy

Three thousand years of Jewish philosophical reflection — from the wisdom of Job and Ecclesiastes, through medieval rationalists and kabbalists, to Spinoza, Rosenzweig, and Levinas. Asks: What can we know of God? How do we act in an unjust world? What does it mean to be a people scattered through history?

All ages

Korean Philosophy

Three thousand years of Korean thought — from ancient shamanic roots through Buddhist scholasticism, Neo-Confucian debate, and Donghak revolution to contemporary feminist and minjung philosophy. Explores how Korea adapted, challenged, and transformed every major intellectual tradition it encountered. What does it mean when peasants arm themselves with a philosophical idea? When a dynasty collapses because it ran out of ideas? This curriculum answers those questions.

All ages

Practical Stoicism

From Epictetus' slave quarters to Marcus Aurelius' imperial tent, Stoic philosophy was forged in the gap between what happens to us and how we respond. This curriculum teaches you to use the Stoic toolkit — the dichotomy of control, negative visualization, the evening review, the four cardinal virtues — as daily practices for managing stress, making clearer decisions, and building genuine resilience. Explores questions like: What is actually within your control? How do your judgments create your emotional reality? What would a Stoic morning routine look like in your life?

History

All ages

World War I

Nineteen fourteen to nineteen nineteen: five years that shattered the old world and made the new one. Trace the arc from the alliance rivalries and nationalist crises that sparked the conflict to the trenches of Verdun, the Russian Revolution, America's entry, and the fateful peace at Versailles — and understand how this war planted the seeds of the next. Covers all fronts, the home front, and the cultural revolution that industrial killing forced on an entire civilization.

All ages

World War II

How did the world descend into its deadliest conflict — and what changed because of it? Trace the path from the aftermath of World War I through the rise of totalitarianism, major battles on every front, the Holocaust, life on the home fronts, and the new world order that emerged from the ruins.

All ages

Cold War

The superpower rivalry that shaped the modern world — from the division of Europe and the nuclear arms race through proxy wars on three continents, life behind the Iron Curtain, and the revolutions that brought down communism. Explores questions like: Why did wartime allies become mortal enemies? How close did we come to nuclear war? What was daily life like in the Soviet bloc?

All ages

History of Palestine

Three thousand years of Palestinian history — from the ancient Canaanite period through Ottoman rule to the present-day conflict. Explores identity, colonialism, displacement, and resistance through the scholarly frameworks of Edward Said, Avi Shlaim, Ilan Pappe, and Rashid Khalidi. A rigorous, source-driven curriculum that centers the Palestinian experience.

All ages

Era of Imperialism

Five centuries of European empire examined from the perspective of colonized peoples. From Mansa Musa's Mali to the fall of apartheid, explore how imperialism reshaped Africa, Asia, the Americas, the Middle East, and the Pacific - and how the colonized resisted, survived, and rebuilt. Who really profited from the Atlantic slave trade? Why did Haiti pay reparations to slaveholders until 1947? How did a legal fiction called terra nullius erase 65,000 years of Aboriginal civilization?

School programmes

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?

Grade 4–10

California Curriculum (CCSS/NGSS)

From place value and fractions to California's Gold Rush and the DNA molecule, this curriculum covers mathematics, English, science, and social studies for Grades 4-10. Aligned to California's Common Core and NGSS standards, it explores questions like: How do ratios and proportional reasoning connect arithmetic to financial literacy? What drove the Age of Revolution, and how do those forces still shape the modern world? How does natural selection work at the molecular level?

Grade 4–10

Texas Curriculum (TEKS)

Grade-level subject mastery for American middle schoolers, aligned to Texas state standards (TEKS). Covers Mathematics and English Language Arts across Grades 6-8. Explores questions like: How do ratios describe the world around us? What makes a convincing argument in writing?

Grade 0–9

Swedish Curriculum (LGR 22)

The Swedish national school curriculum (LGR 22), covering all compulsory subjects from Grade 1 through Grade 9 — mathematics, languages, natural sciences, history, geography, religious studies, civics, arts, music, and physical education. From understanding how ecosystems balance and why the French Revolution changed the world, to comparing ethical frameworks across world religions and reasoning with statistics. Built around Skolverket's national learning goals, as taught in Swedish schools.

Grade 1–12

ΔΕΠΠΣ (Greek curriculum)

Independently authored curriculum aligned to the Greek national ΔΕΠΠΣ/ΑΠΣ framework. Covers 24 subjects across Grades 1–12, from mathematics and language arts to music, art, and physical education. Explores questions like: How did ancient Greek democracy shape the modern world? What makes a good algorithm? How does exercise affect your mental health?

How Epivo works

  1. 01

    Open the app

    Your AI tutor greets you and picks up right where you left off — on your phone.

  2. 02

    Talk through the topic

    The tutor asks questions, explains concepts, and adapts based on your answers — like a real conversation.

  3. 03

    Track your progress

    Every session updates your knowledge map. Gaps get addressed before they become blind spots.

For students

Curated courses from philosophy to school curricula — explore through real voice conversation, at your own pace.

Read more →

For parents

See real progress, not just grades. Know your child is actually learning.

Learn more →

Ready to start with Epivo?

Get early access when we launch

No spam. We'll only email you when Epivo is ready.