Tools for students

AI tools for students —
study, write, finish the paper.

Turn a reading list into notes, notes into flashcards, and a blank page into an outline. Everything free to start.

How students use this.

A real workflow, not a list of apps. Each step chains into the next — summary becomes flashcards, outline becomes draft, draft gets polished.

  1. 01
  2. 02

    Turn what you read into study material. A mind map for the concept structure; flashcards for the facts and definitions; Anki export if you already have a deck habit.

  3. 03

    Actually test yourself. Quiz Generator turns the same chapter or notes into an interactive quiz — MCQ, true/false, or short answer — each with an explanation that teaches, not just an answer key. Retake as many times as you need before the exam.

  4. 04

    Nail the thesis before you write the paper. Thesis Statement Generator gives you 3-5 distinct options, each scored on claim, reasons, scope, and arguability — with a one-line critique so you don't submit something safe but weak.

  5. 05

    Start the paper with a scaffold, not a blank page. Pick the essay type (argumentative, analytical, compare-contrast) and get a thesis + hooks + sectioned outline you can actually build from.

  6. 06
  7. 07
  8. 08

Ready when you are.

Free to try — no signup for the first few runs per day of any tool. A free account adds 30 credits/month and saves your work.

Common questions from students.

Is this safe to use for school?

Our tools support your work — summarizing, outlining, checking grammar, making study cards. We do not write entire essays for you. Most schools permit AI for editing and study support; check your course policy to be sure.

Will my paper be flagged as AI-written?

Our tools generate scaffolds and help with editing — if you write your own draft and use these for support, it'll be in your voice. Running the final text through the Humanizer and rewriting at least one paragraph by hand is a reliable way to produce something that reads human.

I'm poor. How much is free?

Lots. A few runs per day of every tool without signup. Free accounts get 30 credits/month — enough for roughly 15 summaries, 30 title/email runs, or 10 essay outlines per month. The Word Counter is fully free, forever.

Can it help me with non-English coursework?

English interface today; Japanese, Chinese, Spanish, Korean, and Russian are rolling out. The Translator handles 20+ languages for language-class work right now.

Do you save my work?

Under your guest session (cookie) or your account. You can find past summaries, outlines, and flashcard decks in your dashboard. Public share links only work if you share them — we won't broadcast your study materials.

What's the best place to start?

Depends on where you are. Reading something hard? Article or PDF Summarizer. Studying for a test? Flashcard Generator. Staring at a blank doc? Essay Outline Generator. Editing a draft? Grammar Checker + Humanizer.

Tools for other workflows.