EdTool Wins Best AI-Powered EdTech Solution at ETIH Innovation Awards
Learnetic's EdTool has won Best AI-powered EdTech solution (Rest of World) at the inaugural ETIH Innovation Awards 2026. The platform connects lesson creation, assessment, feedback, analytics, accessibility, and content access in a single teaching environment.
Judges recognized EdTool for addressing a specific problem in schools: teachers typically use separate tools for planning, creating content, sharing work, assessing students, and reviewing progress. That fragmentation costs time and makes it harder to respond quickly to student needs.
How EdTool Works
Teachers can convert prompts, PDFs, or textbook photos into interactive lessons, tests, and assignments. The platform supports AI-assisted grading, feedback, analytics, multilingual translation, and Web Content Accessibility Guidelines-compliant content. It includes access to more than 50,000 ready-to-use resources.
A teacher can start with an idea or existing material, convert it into an interactive activity, share it with students, and use the results to decide next steps-all in one place.
Why the Award Matters
Judge Richard Govada Joshua called EdTool "a highly practical and well-designed AI-powered solution" that addresses "teacher workload and fragmented teaching workflows." He highlighted its ability to support the full teaching cycle, from lesson creation to assessment, feedback, and analytics.
Judge Kate Owbridge noted the teacher-led approach: "This is based on what the teacher knows, wants and needs. The dog is wagging the tail here, not the other way around."
Learnetic has 20 years of experience in educational technology and more than 350 education projects across 50 countries. The company has worked with schools, ministries of education, and publishers including Pearson, Klett, and Porto Editora.
Teacher Control and Trust
EdTool generates interactive activities and supports grading, but generated content remains editable and requires teacher approval before reaching students. Uploaded files and prompts are not used for model training, and the system does not build user profiles from submitted prompts.
Magda Dąbrowska, Senior International Brand Manager at Learnetic SA, said: "Education is built on trust, and AI has to earn that trust."
Teachers can inspect, adjust, simplify, expand, or reject AI-generated content. The final decision stays with the teacher.
Accessibility and Inclusion
EdTool lets teachers translate lessons and tests into more than 20 languages and create materials using accessible templates. The platform assigns differentiated tasks based on student performance and includes STEM and special educational needs resources.
Dąbrowska said: "Inclusivity was part of the thinking from the start because classrooms are never one-size-fits-all."
What's Next
Learnetic is developing EdTool AI Tutor, a premium feature designed to support students beyond the classroom. It will help learners practice independently, understand mistakes, receive guided feedback, and generate additional exercises based on their needs.
The company is also preparing AI Tutor support for teachers, so assignments can include guided explanations and reinforcement activities.
For educators looking to understand how AI fits into classroom workflows, AI Learning Path for Teachers covers practical applications in lesson planning, assessment, and feedback.
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