A guided walkthrough of ScrollWell โ a site that helps students understand how social media habits affect mental health, through interactive tools, real data, and research-backed advice.
These numbers come from a Kaggle dataset of 1,700+ students. ScrollWell makes them explorable โ so you can see the patterns, not just read them.
The homepage leads with the key insight right away โ the stats, a clear thesis, and two direct paths forward: play the simulator or explore the feed.
The warm, rounded design keeps it approachable. No lectures โ just enough to make you curious about what's inside each section.
You get 24 hours. Allocate your time between social media, sleep, studying, exercise, and socializing.
As you build your day, health stats update in real time โ self confidence, FOMO level, sleep quality โ all responding to your choices based on actual student data.
Styled like a social media feed, this page delivers research insights as scrollable cards โ in a format you already know how to use.
It's a clever design move: use the language of social media to talk about social media. Each card has a category tag, a bold headline, a key stat, and the evidence behind it.
No lectures, no walls of text โ just scroll to learn.
Three full datasets live here, each with sortable tables and interactive visualizations focused on relationships between variables โ not just raw counts.
The Advice page closes the loop โ taking patterns from the research and turning them into specific, actionable habits organized into five collapsible categories.
Every tip traces back to the data. The 2-hour sleep gap in the research becomes a concrete rule: stop screens one hour before bed, charge your phone across the room.
Not lectures. Just things that actually help.
You don't have to quit social media โ just be intentional. Even reducing usage by one hour a day can meaningfully improve your sleep, mood, and confidence. The data says so.