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Quizlet“Whatever course materials you have, we can ingest them – like PDF, DocX, copy and paste – and then in the process, what we will output is a study guide, which will be more like organized notes or an outline of the content that you have uploaded; a set so that you can then use that in Learn or Flashcards; and then ultimately a practice test as well,” Lomas said.
This ability to upload your content addresses one of my biggest pain points on the platform – manually entering every term and definition into Quizlet – which took hours of my precious study time.
Blast and Categories
Quizlet has also added features to help teachers, including Blast and Categories, which help them create more engaging classroom content.
Blast is a gamified learning tool that lets students participate in asteroid-blasting sessions, matching terms to definitions from study sets. Categories is a Jeopardy-style game in which the whole class can participate in a quiz show in the classroom. Like the rest of the features, teachers can upload their content and have Quizlet convert it into these formats automatically.
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In middle and high school, my teachers would encourage the class to memorize the material for an exam by holding in-class Jeopardy games with test content a day before. It was a fun experience; however, it didn’t happen as often as we’d like, because it took teachers so long to manually create the boards. This feature seems like something both my teachers and classmates could have benefitted from.
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The AI of it all
Quizlet isn’t new to AI; some of its longest-standing features, such as Learn, introduced in 2017, are powered by AI.
Despite being a major part of the platform, AI isn’t overly advertised on the Quizlet site or mentioned once in the press release with this announcement. That is all purposefully done — Lomas shares that the company views AI as a means to bring users an experience they envision, but not as Quizlet’s main focus.
“Rather than being like, ‘Let’s build an AI product and see how it serves students,’ we’re like, ‘How can we serve students? Can AI help us here? Yes, quite a bit,'” said Lomas. “And so that’s how we’ve built it.”
Availability
All of Quizlet’s new features are accessible today for users 16 years old or older in the US and are free with a usage limit. Power users who need unlimited access can subscribe to Quizlet Plus<!–> for $36 per year.