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TutorFlow AI Teaching Tools — Overview

TutorFlow AI Teaching Tools — Overview

TutorFlow includes AI-powered tools for educators: OCR math formula editor, video subtitle generator, AI response comparison, AI detection, assignment feedback, and TutorCampus.

TutorFlow includes a growing set of AI-powered tools designed for tasks that fall outside the course creation workflow. These tools help educators prepare better materials, review learner work more efficiently, and give learners a dedicated space for AI practice.

Available tools

ToolWhat it does
OCR Math Formula EditorConverts handwritten equations, formulas, and notes from images into digital, editable text
Video Subtitle GeneratorUploads a video and generates accurate subtitles and transcripts automatically
Compare AI ResponsesPuts responses from multiple AI models side by side on any prompt
AI Detector for AssignmentsReviews learner submissions for signs of AI-generated content
Assignment Feedback AssistantDrafts structured, personalized feedback for learner assignments
TutorCampusA learner-facing AI practice environment separate from the main course interface

How these tools fit into a teaching workflow

These tools are not separate from TutorFlow's course and classroom system. They work alongside your content, making them useful both as standalone utilities and as part of a broader teaching workflow.

A typical use pattern looks like this:

  • You use the OCR Formula Editor while preparing STEM course content — digitizing handwritten notes into lesson-ready text.
  • You run the Video Subtitle Generator on a recorded lecture before embedding it in a course.
  • You use Compare AI Responses while building an AI literacy lesson — testing prompts to find good comparison examples for learners.
  • After learners submit assignments, you run the AI Detector on submissions and use the Feedback Assistant to draft personalized responses for the whole cohort.
  • Learners use TutorCampus independently to practice with AI outside of structured lesson time.

Who benefits most from these tools

The tools are especially valuable for:

  • Science and math educators who work with handwritten formulas and need them in digital form
  • Language teachers who produce video content and want automatic subtitling
  • AI literacy instructors who need to demonstrate model differences in the classroom
  • University and corporate instructors grading large cohorts, where per-assignment feedback takes significant time
  • Academic integrity teams reviewing submissions for AI-assisted writing
  • Any educator offering AI practice opportunities outside of structured lessons

Tool guides