EduGenius - Built Around You. Designed for Progress.
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Generate quizzes, flashcards, study guides and more with AI. Meet Aria, your personal study coach.
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I’ve always loved learning! The kind where you explore, experiment, and truly understand things, not just memorize them.
That mindset shaped how I teach my kid. From math and science to history and the wonders of the world, I try to keep learning curious, hands-on, and driven by "why," not just "what."
But I kept hitting a wall.
How do you really know if a child has understood something?
Like most parents, I defaulted to testing—quick questions, mini quizzes, revisiting concepts. It worked… for a while. But across subjects, across the day, it became exhausting - for both of us.
And honestly, it didn’t feel right.
Because learning isn’t supposed to feel like a constant exam.
At the same time, I started thinking about teachers.
They’re expected to do the impossible:
Keep up with every student’s pace
Handle endless questions and curiosity
Continuously find new, engaging ways to teach
And somehow design assessments that don’t just grade - but actually reveal how a student is thinking
That last part stuck with me.
👉 Most assessments tell you what a student got wrong.
👉 Very few tell you why they got it wrong.
And without that, you miss the most important thing: critical reasoning.
That’s when it clicked:
👉 Learning is continuous, but feedback is broken.
👉 Assessment exists, but insight is missing.
We need something better:
A way for kids to validate their understanding instantly,
A way for teachers to actually see thinking, not just answers,
And a way to turn everyday learning into meaningful insight, without adding pressure or workload.
That idea is what led me to build this.
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How does Aria adapt when a student keeps getting the same concept wrong?
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Maker
@dmitrii_volosatov Thanks for the question.. this is a genuinely hard problem, and we’re not fully there yet.
Learning typically progresses until a student hits a conceptual roadblock. At that point, understanding often requires re-framing the idea rather than just repeating it. Currently, Aria adapts by presenting the same concept through different formats (e.g., visual, step-by-step, or intuitive explanations) to trigger alternative ways of thinking and help the student reach that 'aha' moment.
We’re continuing to improve how deeply and precisely this adaptation happens.
Can Aria generate stuff from your own notes or PDFs, or is it mostly general topics?
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Maker
@karimbenkeroum yes you can bring in you notes and study material and Aria will contextualise the quizzes based on what you provided and your past progress also. However this feature comes with a paid version
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How does Aria adapt when a student keeps getting the same concept wrong?
@dmitrii_volosatov Thanks for the question.. this is a genuinely hard problem, and we’re not fully there yet.
Learning typically progresses until a student hits a conceptual roadblock. At that point, understanding often requires re-framing the idea rather than just repeating it. Currently, Aria adapts by presenting the same concept through different formats (e.g., visual, step-by-step, or intuitive explanations) to trigger alternative ways of thinking and help the student reach that 'aha' moment.
We’re continuing to improve how deeply and precisely this adaptation happens.
Mailwarm
Can Aria generate stuff from your own notes or PDFs, or is it mostly general topics?
@karimbenkeroum yes you can bring in you notes and study material and Aria will contextualise the quizzes based on what you provided and your past progress also. However this feature comes with a paid version