13 February 2026
We’ve released a set of updates designed to give teachers more flexibility, improve assessment accuracy, and help students learn more effectively. This update includes a brand‑new marking mode for Tasks, improvements to how returned tasks behave, and the first stage of our upgraded AI marking system.New Task marking mode
Tasks were always intended for assessment. They were supposed to mimic the test/exam scenario where students could look at all the questions, tackle them in any order, go back and change their mind before finally submitting their responses for marking. Over time, due to the sandbox nature of Smart Revise it became apparent that there were so many more ways you could use tasks. Not just for summative assessment, but also in formative ways too. One typical approach is to set a task containing a number of questions but tackle them one by one with the student self-assessing their answer before moving onto the next question. Tasks now support this with a new marking mode: Self assessment (after question). Teachers can select this when setting a new task.
Changes to returning a task to the student
When you returned a task to a student they would lose all their answers and marking data, essentially requiring them to retake the task. This has been changed so that their answers, marking and feedback is retained. This allows a student to reflect and improve on their answers before resubmitting the task. If you want one or more students to retake the task from scratch you should copy the task instead. Doing this will create two entries in your mark book, one for each task. If you didn’t want to see both, use the tagging feature to give each task a tag. You can then use these tags to filter what tasks you see in your mark book.Improvements to AI marking
We recently commissioned some research into how we can make AI marking more accurate. This update includes stage 1 of a 3-part plan. We have upgraded to the latest Open AI model that is optimised for structured, rules-based tasks such as extracting key points from answers, checking correctness step-by-step and assigning more consistent marks. We have also significantly increased the prompt to inform it of marking principles and how to justify the marks awarded. The marking should begin to be more accurate because the AI is now instructed to:- Ignore minor spelling errors.
- Accept all valid answers that demonstrate understanding, even if they are not strictly industry standard approaches to compensate for the level of study.
- Adopt a more structured approach distinguishing between completely incorrect and partially correct answers.
- Use a structured output schema so the feedback can be parsed more accurately.