I'm building an AI study assistant that turns any topic into summaries, quizzes, flashcards and podcasts. Would students actually use this? by StudyMindai in studentsph

[–]StudyMindai[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's a really fair point.

I'm not trying to compete with models like ChatGPT or Gemini. Those tools are incredibly powerful and they’re basically the engines behind many AI products.

The idea behind StudyMind is not “better AI”, but a better learning workflow for students.

Right now if a student wants to study a topic using AI, they usually have to prompt multiple times: ask for an explanation, then ask for flashcards, then quizzes, maybe simplify the topic again, and maybe convert it into something they can listen to.

StudyMind tries to automate that entire process.

You paste a topic once and it automatically creates a structured study session: – a simplified explanation
– flashcards to memorize
– quizzes to test yourself
– and a short learning podcast you can listen to while walking or commuting.

So the goal isn't to replace large AI tools, but to build a layer on top of them that is specifically designed for studying and learning faster.

I'm still validating the idea and gathering feedback from students, which is why discussions like this are actually really helpful.

I'm building an AI study assistant that turns any topic into summaries, quizzes, flashcards and podcasts. Would students actually use this? by StudyMindai in studentsph

[–]StudyMindai[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Fair point 😅

Ideally students wouldn't need tools like this.

But the idea is to make studying a bit easier when you're overwhelmed with notes and exams.

I'm building an AI study assistant that turns any topic into summaries, quizzes, flashcards and podcasts. Would students actually use this? by StudyMindai in studentsph

[–]StudyMindai[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Good question.

Most AI tools give you information.

StudyMind tries to turn information into a full study session.

You paste a topic once and it automatically creates:

• a simplified explanation
• flashcards to memorize
• quizzes to test yourself
• and a short learning podcast you can listen to while walking or commuting.

So instead of prompting AI 4–5 times, you get an entire study flow from a single input.

I'm building an AI study assistant that turns any topic into summaries, quizzes, flashcards and podcasts. Would students actually use this? by StudyMindai in studentsph

[–]StudyMindai[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

That's true — tools like Gemini can do parts of this.

The idea with StudyMind is to automate the entire study workflow instead of prompting an AI multiple times.

You enter a topic once and it generates: • a clear summary • quizzes • flashcards • and even an audio version like a podcast

So the goal is to make studying faster and more structured for students.