Read Our Generative AI Playbook
After six years of building AI-powered literacy tools and developing more than 300 unique AI models, we've distilled our most valuable insights into a comprehensive playbook that shares our entire process.
For Education Leaders
As you evaluate AI solutions for your schools, this playbook gives you the critical questions to ask vendors and the frameworks to assess if their tools are truly designed for student success. You'll understand what makes AI effective in educational settings and be able to distinguish between superficial AI implementations and those with deep pedagogical foundations.
For EdTech AI Developers
Skip years of trial and error by learning from our experience. We share our step-by-step development process, technical approaches, and proven methodologies for creating AI that truly enhances learning. From dataset creation to evaluation frameworks, you'll find actionable insights that can be applied immediately to your own AI development work.
For Philanthropic Partners
When funding educational AI initiatives, it's crucial to identify organizations with the expertise and ethical approach to create meaningful impact. Our playbook provides the evaluation criteria and key indicators of effective AI implementation, helping you direct resources to organizations genuinely capable of advancing educational equity through technology.
A complete companion to wireframing, guiding you through theory and practice of creating good designs across every stage in the product development process.
This guide has been produced to give researchers, publishers, librarians and information professionals a basic understanding of the Open Access movement and where we currently stand.
We are seeing a continued growth of interest across the world in the moves made in recent years to stimulate an ‘open access’ environment, where all research outputs will be available to everyone free of charge at the point of use.
Researchers now have access to greater volumes of research literature than ever before, but we are still far from a position where every researcher who needs it has ready access to all the literature that may be relevant to their research. The current economic difficulties also bring with them the risk that library budgets will be cut, and that some of the advances in access over recent years will be reversed.