About us
English
AI Note Taking App for Teachers
An AI note taking app for teachers that turns classroom notes into lesson plans, assessments, and parent-ready summaries
AI powered (Demo)
1
Add a file
Drop in anything you'd like to use.
OR TRY WITH A SAMPLE
2
Pick a prompt
Add a file first — then any prompt runs against it.
By using the product, you agree to our Terms of Service and have read our Privacy Policy.
Trusted by Millions Worldwide
4.4
2,100+ reviews on G2
4.4
8,200+ reviews on Capterra
4.4
73,000+ reviews on App Store
248M
Registered Users
5B
Notes Created
2M
Notes Created Daily
Frequently Asked Questions
An AI note taking app for teachers helps capture lesson plans, meeting notes, student data, and communications. It uses AI to summarize, tag, and transform notes into lesson plans, quizzes, or parent communications, saving time and keeping classroom materials organized in Evernote.
AI accelerates lesson planning by extracting learning objectives, suggesting activity sequences, generating formative assessments, and producing materials lists. Teachers can prompt the assistant from a draft note to create a ready-to-use one-week plan, freeing time for differentiation and student interaction.
Yes. The assistant can generate multiple-choice, short answer, or performance-based questions from your notes. It can also provide answer keys and rubrics, and adjust difficulty levels to match student readiness, making assessment creation faster and more consistent.
Absolutely. The AI can rewrite classroom notes into concise, jargon-free emails or handouts for families. It can tailor tone and detail level, add action steps, and include translation-friendly phrasing so you can share progress and next steps with parents quickly.
Yes. You can ask the assistant to extract key terms and concepts and format them into flashcards or study stacks. It can produce a set number of cards, include definitions, examples, and difficulty tags so students can practice targeted skills.
The assistant can suggest standards alignment by mapping learning objectives in your notes to common standards codes. It highlights evidence in the text that supports alignment and can generate a standards-aligned checklist and performance descriptors for assessments.
Yes. Outputs like lesson plans, quizzes, and rubrics can be shared via Evernote links, exported as PDFs, or copied into your district's LMS. Permissions and sharing controls in Evernote let you manage access while collaborating with grade-level teams.
AI can summarize trends from notes that include student performance, flag recurring misconceptions, and suggest targeted interventions. It synthesizes the data into actionable insights, but you should always verify specifics against source data before making formal decisions.
The assistant can help you organize accommodations and reminders from IEP or 504 notes, produce individualized checklists, and draft accommodation summaries for daily use. Always ensure sensitive information is handled according to your district's policies when sharing or exporting.
Yes. The AI can create tiered tasks, sentence starters, and scaffolded supports tailored to varied learning levels present in your notes, helping you plan inclusive instruction with clear extension and remediation options.
Evernote's library includes templates for meetings and parent conferences. The AI can populate these templates with your notes, extract action items, and build follow-up task lists so each conference yields clear next steps.
The assistant can generate rubrics with performance levels and descriptors based on the learning goals in your notes. You can ask for criteria to be weighted, adjusted for accommodations, or simplified for student-facing use.
Yes. From a single note the assistant can produce printable handouts, exit tickets, and graphic organizers. These materials can be tailored for different reading levels and exported directly as PDFs for distribution.
Core Evernote note-taking features are available offline in the app, but AI-powered transformations generally require an internet connection. You can draft and edit notes offline and run AI-based actions once you reconnect.
The assistant works best with clear, detailed source notes. It may not perfectly interpret ambiguous shorthand or incomplete data and should be used as a productivity aid rather than a substitute for professional judgment. Always review and adjust AI outputs for accuracy and context.