Overview
- After a pilot at about 30 campuses, the company says hundreds of instructors will use the tool this fall at institutions including Penn State, Tufts, and Liberty.
- Instructors gain controls to set when students can access the chatbot, cap the number of graded attempts, require work images, and offer unlimited unscored practice.
- New integrations connect MathGPT.ai to Canvas, Blackboard, and Brightspace, and the company cites ADA compliance with features such as screen reader support, audio mode, and captioned video lessons.
- The company markets the system as “cheat-proof” and says it enforces topic guardrails; it also discloses possible errors, uses human annotators, and rewards users for reporting mistakes.
- The service supports college-level math today and plans to add more subjects and a mobile app, with a free tier available and a paid option priced at $25 per student per course.