Given that content is pedagogically sound and human curated it might be useful to someone. It could be used for things like AI training (after all it resembles a chat) or for creating individual math exercise to print them on paper.
If anyone has some pointers I would love to hear them - Here is a content explorer: https://curriculum.amy.app/ToM (this does not includes the mistakes part) - That's the landing page: https://www.amy.app (you can try it by click the demo button) - This is an SAT specific version: https://sat.amy.app
Please find my contacts in my HN profile.
Thanks again!
I participated actively building questions for one of them before the pandemic, and we copied a lot of the stuff to one or two of the others.
I don't know about selling this stuff, but I think it will be difficult.
Anyway, I have some feedback about the questions. I tried the free ones. In the calculus example, when the computer replaces
something + 7x + c
with x=-4, it uses something + 7 × - 4 + c
We usualy prefer that the students use parenthesis arround the negative values like something + 7 × (- 4) + c
In a midterm we will put a warning, but not substract points if they don't use the parenthesis. Most of the times the students don't write the × and the equation is confusing.Also in the next step
something + - 28 + c
I strongly preffer something + (- 28) + c
Off the top of my head
- Sell them to another educational company or charity. I can think of a dozen maths websites I used while at school that might want to pay for that content.
- Use them to train an ML model that generates new questions, then sell that (btb or btc).
- Sell them to parents and students as exercises.
- Sell them to teachers as exercise
- Sell a service to schools that allows access to them (either a directory or a "click to get a random exercise!" kinda thing).
-Sell a service that produces new mock tests with a single click, and that as a data source.
While I'm British, not American, I saw and used plenty of services that sold questions and worksheets. All were technically hideous.
I finished my A levels (high school) 6 months ago fwiw.