AI is almost magic. Yet the format it produces is one we already know well: text. AI in education gives us more of something we already have in high quality. When you see how many good texts, assignments, and well-crafted lessons already exist—even just at a single school—a big question arises: How can we get artificial intelligence in schools to give us something new instead of just more of the same?
StudyMe.ai was created by Sune de Montgomery Nørgård to answer this question. The goal is to make text come alive. Research shows that students respond exceptionally well to immediate feedback through platforms like StudyMe.ai. At the same time, teachers can easily get an overview of how each individual student is performing.
Twelve years ago, the focus was on self-correcting assignments and Moodle. Back then, it required an entire IT department to set up a Moodle server, followed by many hours of work creating assignment sets for students. But the students were happy. With StudyMe.ai, there's no need for an IT department, and AI creates a solid foundation that just needs to be adjusted.
The best results are achieved when there's a "human in the loop." This applies generally when using AI, but it's particularly important in education. The teacher knows their own students and knows what level the assignments should be at. Often there's a need to edit and restructure assignments, rewrite explanations, and insert new elements so students hit their zone of proximal development. That's why StudyMe.ai has comprehensive editing tools where teachers can adapt content, insert new assignments, and even get AI to assist along the way.
When you or your colleagues have created something really good, it should of course be shared so that even more students can benefit from it. On StudyMe.ai, you can easily share it with a colleague—just send the lesson’s share code
It's a fantastic time we live in. StudyMe.ai works in all subjects—from mathematics and science to languages, history, and beyond. It can be used in primary school, high school, vocational education, and all the way up to higher education, especially at the explanatory level.