For college teachers

Your entire teaching workload. One workroom.

96 teaching tasks, drafted for your course, your discipline, and your standards in minutes. You stay the teacher. It does the typing.

It's Sunday night. Tomorrow needs a lesson plan, thirty drafts need feedback, and the rubric for the next assignment still lives in your head.

You know AI could help. You've tried. What comes back sounds like it was written for nobody's course in particular, so you fix it line by line and wonder why you bothered.

Generic tools know nothing about your course. This one starts by learning it.

How it works

First, a short interview. Paste in your syllabus, answer a handful of questions about your discipline, your students, and how you teach. Five minutes, once per course.

Then pick any task from the menu. A rubric, next week's lesson plan, feedback on a stack of drafts, the email to the student who vanished in week six.

It drafts the artifact for your actual course, and everything you build gets saved and feeds the next thing. The rubric it writes knows your objectives. The feedback it drafts knows your rubric.

By week four it knows your course better than any tool you've ever used, and every draft lands closer to done.

Ten departments. Ninety-six tasks.

One line it will never cross: it does not grade. It drafts the rubric, the feedback, the reply. Every score, every judgment call, every grade stays yours. Permanently.

What it costs

$19 a month after a free 30-day trial, the founding rate for the first 100 teachers. You keep that rate as long as you stay. After the first 100, it goes to $29. Cancel anytime in one click.

Next Sunday night looks like this one, or it doesn't. One rubric you didn't build from scratch pays for the month. You'll build more than one.

Free for one month

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Built by Doan Winkel. Questions? Reply to any email from me.

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A note on student work: strip student names before pasting anything in. And the line stands: this drafts, you grade.