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Tech

AI education platform secures £1.65m in new funding

Graide was spun out of University of Birmingham in 2021 and aims to help teachers make marking homework more efficient

The team at Graide (from left): Manjinder Kainth, George Bartlett, Robert Stanyon and Austin Tomlinson with Nicola Wilkin, director of education at University of Birmingham

An education company spun out from University of Birmingham has secured funding to help it target new markets in North America.

Graide, which was founded in 2021 by former students Robert Stanyon, Manjinder Kainth and George Bartlett, has created an AI-based platform aimed at helping teachers mark homework.

It has now agreed a finance package worth £1.65 million to support its expansion in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ and target new markets in the US and Canada.

Graide uses assistive AI and machine learning to help teachers grade essays and provide feedback to students.

Initially designed for marking maths, physics and chemistry papers, the company has since launched a new platform that can mark essays and reports in all subjects. The firm is also working on a new feature to detect students using AI to write essays.

Graide evaluates both the structure and quality of submissions, can mark more than one question at a time and is 'self-aware', thereby only showing marks it is confident about and alerting teachers to work which requires human scrutiny.

The company, which is based in Wolverhampton and employs eight staff, said studies showed it could reduce marking time between four and sevenfold and save more than £400,000 of staff costs annually.