Thai AI study app adds personalised paths for pupils
RevisionSuccess, an AI-based study platform built by students at Chulalongkorn University, has released a major update centred on personalised learning paths and new analytics tools for teachers.
The Bangkok-founded team said the platform focuses on how individual students learn and revise, rather than offering a fixed set of lessons. The developers positioned the product as a response to heavy workloads and limited individual support in standard classroom settings.
"We saw that most platforms give everyone the same lessons and hope students figure things out on their own," said Phonlawat Sirajindapirom, CEO, RevisionSuccess. "But real classrooms aren't one-size-fits-all. We wanted technology that adjusts to the student, not the other way around."
Study flows
The update introduces what the company calls "hyper-personalized study flows". Students can upload or select classroom materials. The system converts them into structured digital lessons.
The platform breaks topics into short sections. Each section includes explanations, examples, and short assessments. RevisionSuccess said the system tracks how students move through the material. It then adjusts future lessons and review schedules.
The product uses learning pattern signals from student activity. It increases targeted practice when a student struggles with a concept. It reduces repetition for students who master topics quickly.
An AI tutor sits inside each lesson. It answers questions and provides step-by-step explanations. The company described the tutor as a supplement to classroom learning that students can use outside school hours.
"Our goal is to reduce the frustration that comes from not knowing what to study or how to study," said Phuwadit Sutthaporn, COO, RevisionSuccess. "When students have a clear, personalized path, they can focus on learning instead of feeling overwhelmed."
Different formats
RevisionSuccess said the platform changes how it presents material based on how a student interacts with lessons. It may emphasise practice questions for one student and concept explanations or visual breakdowns for another. The company said the platform also combines notes, flashcards, quizzes, and tutor support inside a single workflow.
The product also generates study schedules. It factors in availability, exam timelines, and progress levels, according to the company. It positions the schedules as relevant for exam preparation, daily review, and catch-up study.
"Studying already takes a lot of energy," said Sutthaporn. "Students shouldn't have to spend extra time organizing their tools. Everything should work together naturally."
Teacher dashboards
The January release also adds dashboards aimed at educators. RevisionSuccess said these tools show class-level trends, student engagement signals, and learning gaps. The company said teachers can review summarised insights on topics students struggle with and topics they have mastered.
The founders framed the educator tools as a way to reduce manual data collection and analysis. They also said the platform does not aim to replace teachers.
"Teachers already do an incredible amount of work," said Sirajindapirom. "We want to remove unnecessary administrative tasks so they can spend more time teaching and supporting students."
Student builders
RevisionSuccess said its founders built the platform while managing university workloads. The team said the initial concept came from frustration with traditional study methods and digital platforms that did not address individual weaknesses.
"We were using the same tools as everyone else and still felt lost sometimes," said Sirajindapirom. "So we started asking what learning tools should look like if students designed them themselves."
The company said this approach shaped interface choices and feature priorities. It described the product as focused on clarity and classroom relevance rather than complex controls.
Thai ambitions
The launch also reflects growing activity among Thai developers building consumer and education software products. The company argued that local teams can build tools that reflect regional education systems and cultural learning styles.
"The future of education technology shouldn't belong to only a few global companies," said Sirajindapirom. "Students everywhere should be able to build tools for their own communities and share them with the world."
Access focus
RevisionSuccess said it wants to make learning support accessible to students without private tutoring or specialist resources. The company described automation of guidance and practice as a way to reduce reliance on expensive external services.
"Quality education should not depend on family income or location," said Sutthaporn. "Technology gives us a chance to close those gaps instead of widening them."
The team said it plans further work on its personalisation algorithms, new educator tools, and school partnerships for classroom testing.
"When you help someone learn better, you're not just improving grades," said Sirajindapirom. "You're changing what they believe is possible for themselves."