Built to Support Teachers, Not Replace Them
There's a lazy assumption floating around that AI in education is here to replace teachers. Scholars Tutorial India was built on exactly the opposite idea.
One teacher, forty students, thirty different learning gaps, and about six hours a week to somehow address all of them. That's not a teaching problem — that's a time problem. And time is the one thing no teacher has spare.
So our AI does the part machines are actually good at: spotting which topics a class collectively fumbled, flagging the misconceptions hiding behind wrong answers, and drafting a lesson plan around what the data actually shows. The teacher does the part only a teacher can do — read the room, adjust the explanation, notice the student who's gone quiet.
AI handles the diagnosis. Teachers handle the teaching. That division of labour isn't a compromise — it's the whole point, and it's how a good teacher gets to spend more time actually teaching.










