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The 7 Best AI Tools for Teachers in UK Schools (2026): Set Homework, Track Progress & Save Hours

Corey CrossCorey Cross
19 February 202615 min read160 views
Teacher AI tools without the need for bribary

The 7 Best AI Tools for Teachers in UK Schools (2026): Set Homework, Track Progress & Save Hours

Teachers in the UK are spending an average of 12 hours a week on marking and admin. That's time that could be spent actually teaching, giving feedback, or — radical idea — going home at a reasonable hour. The good news? AI-powered classroom tools have matured rapidly, and the best ones now handle homework setting, automatic marking, student progress tracking, and even personalised intervention recommendations without adding another login to your already overflowing toolbar.

But not all teacher tools are created equal. Some are brilliant at generating lesson plans but give you nothing on student data. Others track homework completion but don't actually teach students anything meaningful. The platforms that genuinely reduce workload are the ones that combine both sides — tools that help your students learn independently while feeding you the data you need to teach more effectively.

We've reviewed the most popular AI-powered tools available to UK teachers right now, focusing on what matters most: how much time they actually save you, how useful the student data is, how well the content aligns with UK exam boards, and whether your students will actually use them.


1. Revision Genie — Best All-in-One AI Platform for Teachers and Students

Website: revisiongenie.com Best for: Teachers who want a single platform that handles homework, revision, progress tracking, and classroom communication Covers: GCSE, A-Level, BTEC | All major exam boards

Most teacher tools fall into one of two camps: platforms that generate resources for you (lesson plans, worksheets, quizzes) or platforms that students use independently while you monitor from a dashboard. Revision Genie is one of the few that does both — and does both well.

What teachers actually get:

The classroom management system lets you create and manage classes, set homework with specific topics and deadlines, and share AI-generated quizzes and step-by-step lessons directly with your students. You can post announcements, homework reminders, and resources all from one dashboard, cutting out the back-and-forth across multiple platforms.

But the real value is in what happens on the student side. Each student gets access to subject-specific AI "Genies" — tutors that are trained on specific exam board specifications, not generic AI. When your students use Revision Genie independently, the platform tracks their performance across every subtopic using an Elo-style skill rating system. That means you can see at a glance which students are sitting at Beginner level (800-1000) on a topic and which have progressed to Intermediate, Advanced, or Expert — and plan your interventions accordingly.

The homework problem, solved:

Setting meaningful homework that's automatically marked is where Revision Genie excels for teachers. You can assign interactive lessons that include seven different question types — quizzes, fill-in-the-blank, matching, multi-select, diagram labelling, maths equations, and code completion for Computer Science. Every response is marked instantly, and results feed back into each student's skill profile. No marking pile. No chasing. No guessing who actually understood the homework and who just copied.

The exam question bank takes this further. Questions are organised by subject, topic, and subtopic, and you can build custom exam papers using a drag-and-drop creator. The platform auto-generates cover sheets, includes mark schemes, and lets you export to print or download as a Word document. For mock exam season, this alone can save hours of assembly.

AI marking that actually works:

Revision Genie's AI marking goes beyond multiple choice. Students can type extended answers or upload photos of handwritten work, and the AI analyses their responses against the mark scheme, providing detailed feedback and improvement suggestions. For subjects like maths and science where working out matters, this is a genuine time-saver — students get immediate feedback without you having to collect 30 exercise books.

Keeping students engaged without bribery:

One of the biggest headaches with homework platforms is getting students to actually use them. Revision Genie's gamification system handles this surprisingly well. Students earn XP for correct answers, maintain daily streaks (200 XP to keep their streak alive, 2000 XP for a gold streak), and compete in weekly leagues across six tiers from Bronze to Obsidian. The top 3 students in each league get promoted, the bottom 3 get demoted — and students genuinely care about their ranking. There's also a "Wishes" currency system that encourages thoughtful use of the AI features rather than mindless clicking.

Beyond the dashboard — what students can actually do:

Students aren't limited to answering pre-set questions. They can chat with their AI Genie about any topic in their specification, upload documents from class for the AI to explain, paste YouTube links to discuss video content, and use spaced repetition flashcards (powered by the SM-2 algorithm) for long-term retention. Language students get text-to-speech pronunciation support. There's even a Chrome extension for quick revision access.

School-level features:

For heads of department and senior leaders, Revision Genie offers a school admin dashboard with seat-based subscriptions, school-wide analytics, and privacy controls including the ability to hide students from public leaderboards and restrict profile visibility. It's GDPR compliant with full data deletion support and built-in safeguarding systems.

Pricing: Free tier available. Premium individual subscriptions and school seat-based licensing. Payments via GoCardless.

Bottom line: Revision Genie is the rare platform where the teacher tools and the student experience are equally strong. You get automatic marking, granular progress data, and classroom management features. Your students get an AI tutor that adapts to their level, engaging gamification, and genuine exam preparation. One login, both sides covered.


2. Seneca Learning — Best Free Homework & Revision Platform

Website: senecalearning.com Best for: Teachers who need a free, no-budget-approval-required platform for setting revision homework Covers: KS2, KS3, GCSE, A-Level | Major exam boards

Seneca has become the default homework platform in the majority of UK secondary schools, and it's easy to see why. The free tier is remarkably generous — over 600 exam-board-specific courses, automatic marking, and the ability to set assignments across any topic. For teachers who need a reliable way to set and track revision homework without a budget conversation, Seneca is hard to beat.

The teacher dashboard lets you create classes, set assignments on specific topics, and see completion rates and scores at a glance. You can also generate printable PDF reports and send parental progress updates. The platform's AI tutor, Amelia, gives students 24/7 support, and the content uses cognitive science principles like retrieval practice and interleaving.

Where it falls short for teachers: The progress data, while useful, is less granular than what you get from platforms with adaptive difficulty systems — you can see scores and completion, but you don't get the same subtopic-level skill tracking. The questions also tend to be simpler than exam-standard, which means high-attaining students might not be stretched enough. Seneca is excellent for content recall and building foundational knowledge, but teachers looking for exam-style practice with detailed marking may need to supplement with another tool.

Pricing: Free core platform for teachers and students. Premium adds additional courses and features.


3. Tassomai — Best for Self-Setting, Self-Marking Homework

Website: tassomai.com Best for: Science, Maths, and English departments that want to eliminate the homework-setting cycle entirely Covers: KS3 and GCSE | Maths, English, Science, History, Geography, and more

Tassomai's pitch to teachers is straightforward: stop setting and marking homework — let the algorithm do it. The platform assigns students personalised "Daily Goals" based on adaptive multiple-choice quizzes. With every interaction, Tassomai learns what each student knows and doesn't know, adjusting the content to target knowledge gaps. Teachers don't need to set individual tasks — the platform handles it automatically.

The teacher dashboard is where Tassomai shines. The "Understanding Grid" gives you an instant visual overview of which topics your students are strong on and where the gaps are, at both individual and class level. Printable PDF reports provide actionable insights, and the newer "Group Quiz" feature lets you run live, data-informed quizzes in the classroom that prioritise the specific misconceptions of that group.

The Class Tasks feature also lets you assign focused work on specific topics when you need to override the algorithm for a particular lesson or unit. Tassomai guarantees schools a grade 5-9 for all students who complete 80% of the course, which speaks to their confidence in the system.

Where it falls short for teachers: Tassomai is built around multiple-choice retrieval practice, which is excellent for embedding knowledge but doesn't develop exam technique for extended answers. The platform is also KS3 and GCSE only — A-Level and BTEC teachers are out of luck. Subject coverage, while growing, is still narrower than platforms like Seneca or Revision Genie. And at £15 per student annually (with volume discounts), it requires budget approval in a way that free platforms don't.

Pricing: From £15 per student per year for schools (volume discounts available). Family subscriptions from £8.99/month.


4. Sparx — Best for Maths and Science Homework Specifically

Website: sparxmaths.com / sparxscience.com Best for: Maths and Science departments that want personalised, automatically-set weekly homework Covers: KS3 and GCSE | National Curriculum and major exam boards

Sparx has built a strong reputation specifically in maths and, more recently, science. The platform generates one hour of personalised homework per student per week, automatically aligned to your school's scheme of learning. Every task is calibrated to the right difficulty — challenging enough to build understanding, achievable enough to maintain completion rates.

The system uses spaced repetition and interleaved practice, so students are regularly revisiting previous topics alongside new material. Video tutorials provide support when students get stuck, and instant feedback means they know immediately where they've gone wrong. For teachers, the analytics show homework completion, time spent, and areas where students are struggling.

Sparx also has a Reader product for literacy, making it a broader option for schools wanting to consolidate platforms. The company's research backing — validated by Cambridge University and RAND Europe — gives it strong credibility with senior leaders.

Where it falls short for teachers: Sparx is narrowly focused on maths, science, and reading. If you teach humanities, languages, or any other subject, you'll need a separate platform entirely. Some parents and students have also reported frustration with the maths homework specifically — the system's insistence on exact methods can feel rigid, and struggling students sometimes spend excessive time on questions without adequate support. There's also no AI chat tutor for general questions and no gamification beyond basic achievement tracking.

Pricing: School subscription model. Contact for pricing.


5. Educake — Best Budget Option for Science Departments

Website: educake.co.uk Best for: Science teachers who want exam-style short-answer quizzes with automatic marking on a tight budget Covers: KS3 and GCSE | Major exam boards | Sciences, English, Geography, History, Computer Science, Maths, PE

Educake stands out for two things: its price and its question format. At around £800 per year for unlimited students at KS3 and KS4 (often less than £1 per student), it's one of the most affordable options available. And unlike platforms that rely on multiple choice, Educake requires students to type short answers — meaning they practice recalling and using scientific terminology rather than just recognising correct options.

The platform has over 30,000 questions mapped to specification points across major exam boards. Teachers can set quizzes in seconds, and the automatic marking provides instant results. The analytics go deep — you can see exactly which specification points individual students or whole classes are struggling with, compare to national data, and print reports for parents' evenings.

The custom quiz builder also lets you create your own questions, and the platform integrates with Google Classroom for a smoother workflow.

Where it falls short for teachers: Educake is purely an assessment and homework tool — there's no lesson content, no AI tutoring, no adaptive learning pathways, and no gamification. Students answer questions and get marks, but there's no guided learning or explanation when they get things wrong. It also doesn't cover A-Level content, limiting its usefulness in sixth form. The interface is functional rather than polished, which can affect student engagement compared to more modern platforms.

Pricing: From £800/year for unlimited KS3 and KS4 students per subject.


6. Century Tech — Best for Personalised Learning Pathways

Website: century.tech Best for: Schools that want AI-driven adaptive learning with detailed leadership dashboards Covers: KS2, KS3, GCSE | English, Maths, Science, Geography, PE

Century Tech uses AI to create personalised learning pathways for each student, dynamically adjusting content based on their performance, knowledge gaps, and pace. The platform combines short video lessons, slide-based content, and practice questions, giving students multiple ways to engage with material.

For teachers, Century provides real-time access to student progress data through visual dashboards. You can see which students need intervention, which topics are causing problems across a class, and how engagement levels compare. Senior leaders get a separate dashboard for monitoring department performance and driving whole-school strategy.

Century reports impressive attainment gains — claiming up to 10x the national average grade improvement for regular users. Independent studies by Nesta and Ufi VocTech Trust have shown measurable improvements from even one hour per week on the platform.

Where it falls short for teachers: Century's subject coverage is narrower than many competitors — it focuses on English, maths, and science, with limited coverage elsewhere. The platform doesn't include exam-style practice or AI marking of written answers, so it's better for learning content than developing exam technique. Some teachers report a learning curve in getting the platform set up effectively, and the lack of gamification means student engagement depends heavily on teacher enforcement. It's also a premium product, which means budget approval is required.

Pricing: Subscription model. Contact for pricing (varies by school size, with multi-year and multi-school discounts).


7. TeacherMatic — Best for AI Resource Generation

Website: teachermatic.com Best for: Teachers who want AI to generate lesson plans, worksheets, quizzes, and other resources quickly Covers: Any subject, any level (resource generation, not student-facing platform)

TeacherMatic takes a completely different approach from the other tools on this list. Rather than being a student-facing learning platform, it's a teacher-only resource generator. With over 150 AI-powered generators, you can create lesson plans, schemes of work, multiple-choice quizzes, rubrics, discussion prompts, differentiated worksheets, and more — all from a simple text input. No prompt engineering required.

The platform was developed with input from over 300 UK teachers and has been piloted extensively in FE colleges through JISC. It's particularly useful for NQTs and teachers adapting to new specifications, as it can generate starting-point resources that you then refine with your professional expertise.

TeacherMatic also includes tools for senior leaders and administrators — generating policies, reports, communications, and governance documents — making it useful beyond the classroom.

Where it falls short for teachers: TeacherMatic generates resources, but it doesn't teach students anything. There's no homework platform, no student dashboard, no progress tracking, no automatic marking, and no adaptive learning. You still need a separate platform for all student-facing functions. The quality of generated resources, while good, always requires teacher review and editing — it's a starting point, not a finished product. It also doesn't have any UK curriculum alignment built in, so you'll need to check that generated content matches your exam board specification.

Pricing: Free tier available. Paid plans for individuals and schools.


How to Choose the Right AI Tool for Your Department

The ideal setup for most teachers in 2026 isn't a single tool — it's a primary platform supplemented where needed. Here's how to think about it:

If you want one platform for everything — homework, revision, tracking, and student engagement — Revision Genie covers the widest ground. It's the only platform on this list that combines AI tutoring, adaptive difficulty, exam-style practice with AI marking, gamification, classroom management, and school-level analytics in one place.

If your budget is zero, Seneca is the clear choice for getting started. Set homework, track completion, and give students access to revision content without spending a penny.

If your department wants to eliminate homework admin entirely, Tassomai's self-setting, self-marking system is purpose-built for this. The teacher dashboard data is excellent for planning interventions.

If you're a maths or science department specifically, Sparx offers deeply personalised weekly homework with strong research backing, though you'll need additional tools for everything else.

If you need to generate teaching resources fast, TeacherMatic's AI generators can produce lesson plans, worksheets, and assessments in seconds — but pair it with a student-facing platform for the actual learning.


Final Thoughts

The best AI tools for teachers don't just save time on marking — they change what's possible in the classroom. When homework is set and marked automatically, when you can see exactly which students are struggling with which subtopics, and when your students are genuinely motivated to revise independently, the time you get back goes straight into what actually moves the needle: better teaching, better feedback, and better outcomes.

The platforms that deliver this best are the ones that work for both sides of the classroom. Revision Genie stands out because it gives teachers the data and tools they need while simultaneously giving students an AI tutor, adaptive learning, and a reason to keep coming back. That dual value is what sets it apart.

Ready to reclaim your evenings? Try RevisionGenie free with your class →

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