Feature · SLAtech Education

Quiz Mode — Students Learn by Doing

Passive reading doesn't stick. Quiz Mode generates unique multiple-choice quizzes from your uploaded content, explains every wrong answer, and feeds into Weak-Spot detection.

Unique quizzes
3 langs
English, Hebrew, Russian
Instant
Score + explanation
Safe
Academic Integrity

Sound Familiar?

📖

Passive Reading

Students read the slides, feel familiar with them, and assume they've understood. Re-testing a week later reveals they haven't.

No Self-Test Between Lessons

Without practice checkpoints, gaps compound silently until the exam exposes them.

😰

Exam-Day Surprises

The first time a student discovers a weak topic shouldn't be during the final. Quiz Mode surfaces gaps while there's still time to fix them.

What You Get

🎯

Generated from Uploaded Content

Questions are drawn from the material you indexed — not from a generic bank. Your syllabus, your phrasing, your emphasis.

🔁

Unique Every Time

Each quiz reshuffles questions, varies phrasing and re-randomises answer order. No shared answer key across students.

📊

Score + Explanation

Immediate feedback with the correct answer and a why-it's-correct explanation — so wrong answers turn into learning, not frustration.

🎯

Weak-Spot Integration

Every quiz feeds the Weak-Spot tracker. Students (and educators) see per-topic accuracy across all quizzes taken.

🌍

3 Languages

Quizzes rendered in English, Hebrew or Russian. Answer explanations in the student's language.

Frequently Asked Questions

No — each quiz is generated fresh from your content with randomised order and phrasing. Even if two students compare notes, the quiz they see next is different.

Quiz Mode is designed as a practice and self-test tool, not a proctored exam. The lecturer remains the grading authority. The value is the per-topic feedback loop between lessons, not replacing the final.

It generates from whatever content you've indexed — slides, PDFs, transcripts, syllabus. Tune the coverage by adjusting what you upload; no prompt engineering required.

Multiple-choice questions on concepts, definitions and worked-example steps work very well. Pure computation (unique numerical answers per student) is less suited — that's what a calculator-based exam is for.

The student's detected language — English, Hebrew, or Russian. Question text stays in the language the source material uses.

Related

Ready to Get Started?

14-day free trial. No credit card. Setup in 10 minutes.

Start Free Trial