
GradeLab
Automated Handwritten Exam Grading | AI Assessment Platform
93 followers
Automated Handwritten Exam Grading | AI Assessment Platform
93 followers
GradeLab's AI assistant grades handwritten exams with human-like accuracy. Spend less time on paper work and more time educating students.
This is the 3rd launch from GradeLab. View more
GradeLab V4.0
Launching today
GradeLab v4.0 turns grading into a full classroom workflow.
What's new:
๐ Annotation Pinpointing: Leave feedback directly on the paper, right where it matters.
๐ซ Classroom Management: Organize students, assign assessments, track progress in one place.
๐ค Student Submissions: Students submit handwritten or digital work directly through GradeLab.
From submission to feedback, all in one platform.
Interactive





Free
Launch Team

@om_joshi0710ย Congrats on teh launch Om & team. How do you deal with exceptionally bad handwriting (worse than Dr level)?
@zolani_matebeseย Haha, great question and honestly one we get a lot! ๐
Bad handwriting is where GradeLab actually shines. Our AI is trained specifically on Indian handwriting patterns across thousands of real student papers, which means it has seen everything from barely legible scribbles to full-on mystery scripts.
For exceptionally poor handwriting, GradeLab uses a combination of contextual understanding and curriculum-aligned inference. It doesn't just try to read a letter in isolation. It reads the whole answer, understands the subject context, and makes an intelligent judgment. Think of it like how a teacher who knows the syllabus can decode a student's handwriting better than a stranger can.
And in cases where confidence is low, GradeLab flags it for teacher review rather than guessing blindly. So nothing slips through unchecked.
Dr-level handwriting? Challenge accepted. ๐
Thank you for the wishes, means a lot! ๐
Congrats on the launch, Om. The full classroom workflow angle is interesting, especially moving beyond grading into annotations, submissions, and progress tracking.
One thing Iโm curious about is how you know the feedback is actually effective for students. Are teachers usually accepting GradeLabโs version of the feedback, or are they editing it a lot themselves before sending it back?