Phoebe for EdTech
A tutor that
knows your
curriculum.
Students already use AI — on your course material or the open internet. Phoebe gives them an AI tutor grounded in what you've actually taught, with answers faculty can verify.
Curriculum-grounded
Faculty-controlled
24/7 student support
92%
of students already use AI tools for coursework
61%
of faculty feel equipped to guide student AI use
3×
more questions answered accurately when grounded in course material
The problem
Students use AI. It's just not yours.
01
Students use ChatGPT on the wrong content
When a student asks ChatGPT about their lecture material, they get a generic internet answer — not the specific framework or methodology their professor taught. Confusion compounds.
02
Faculty can't verify AI-assisted work
Without source attribution, faculty can't tell whether a student's AI-assisted analysis is grounded in course material or hallucinated from somewhere else. Trust erodes on both sides.
03
Student data in public AI tools
Every student question sent to a public AI tool leaves your institution's data jurisdiction. For institutions subject to privacy regulation, this is a risk most haven't formally assessed yet.
04
One-size-fits-all answers fail students
Your course has a specific point of view. Your reading list has a reason. Generic AI flattens all of that into the average of the internet — which isn't what you spent years designing your curriculum to teach.
How Phoebe works for EdTech
Your course material,
finally interactive.
01
Upload your course content
Syllabi, lecture notes, readings, case studies, rubrics — all in one place. Faculty control exactly what the tutor sees.
02
Students ask questions naturally
"Can you explain the difference between the two frameworks we covered in Week 4?" Phoebe searches the actual course material to answer.
03
Answers cite your material
Every answer links to the lecture slide, reading, or case study it drew from. Students see the source — and so can faculty.
04
Runs privately for your institution
Student questions and course content stay in your workspace. Nothing is shared across customers or used for model training.
Phoebe · EdTech workspace
● IndexedStudent asks
"What's the difference between Piaget and Vygotsky's theories of learning that we covered?"
Phoebe's answer
Piaget emphasised individual cognitive development through stages, while Vygotsky focused on social and cultural context — particularly the "zone of proximal development." Week 6 covers where these frameworks agree and diverge on scaffolding.
Sources
Week_6_Lecture_Notes.pdfSlides 12–18
Vygotsky_Reading_Week4.pdfpp. 23–27
Course_Reader_Ch3.pdf§Constructivism
Get started
Give students AI
they can learn from.
Spin up a course-grounded tutor in minutes. Faculty stay in control, students get accurate help around the clock.