Yes — Digital Red Pen reads each student's handwritten steps and awards partial credit from the process shown, not just the final answer. The machine grades; you review every score and make the final call before anything reaches students.
Keyless Grading for Math
It reads the work,
not just the answer.
Scan your student stack with a clean copy of the test. Upload one PDF. Get back graded exams with partial credit, per-student reports, and class analytics — no answer key to build, done inside the Sunday-night window.
Get started →How it works
Scan your stack
Place your student exams with a clean copy of the test at the front. Scan to one PDF — no sorting, no cover sheets, no answer key required.
Upload — it grades in parallel
The system spawns an isolated worker for each exam and grades every paper in parallel — each read independently, at the same time. A full class set finishes in roughly the time a single exam takes, not one-after-another. One bad scan fails alone — it never holds up the rest of the batch.
Review, approve, done
The Desk — the built-in review layer — presents every grade for your sign-off. Override anything. Issue the report. Nothing reaches students until you approve.
What you get back
Partial credit from the steps
The system reads each student's handwritten work — setup, process, intermediate steps — and awards credit for what was correct, not only the final answer.
Per-student reports
Each student's exam comes back with a graded breakdown. Walk into class the next morning knowing exactly who needs what.
Class analytics
Grade distribution, score trends, and problem-level breakdowns — the diagnostic picture for the whole class, without a spreadsheet.
Deadline-safe by design
The isolation architecture means a malformed scan fails alone. Graceful partial results: if a few exams need your eyes, the rest of the batch comes back complete.
"I checked it against my own Algebra 2 grading. It agreed with me about as well as two good teachers agree with each other. Honestly, on the Sunday nights I graded after 9 pm, it was more consistent than I was — I was handing different scores to kids for the same work depending on how tired I felt. The machine doesn't have bad days."— Zack Alexander, co-founder and secondary math teacher
You make the call.
The machine applies the standard. You judge. That is not a disclaimer — it is the design. The Desk is a built-in review layer between grading and the report. Every grade is presented to you before it leaves the system. Override anything; rulings propagate automatically to every matching case in the stack, so one correction covers the whole class.
The system also knows what it is not good at. Handwritten graphs are hard to parse reliably, so graph-heavy problems are flagged and routed to you rather than graded with false confidence. You get the full picture — the grades it is confident in and the ones it is handing back.
Grading
$30
per month · 200 pages included · cancel anytime
Need more? Additional 200-page packs at $35 each.
Start grading tonight →Frequently asked questions
Can it read messy student handwriting?
Yes. The system is built for real student handwriting — not printer-perfect text. Multiple AI models read each page in parallel and a consensus arbiter reconciles their reads. Handwriting that is genuinely unreadable gets flagged for your review rather than guessed at.
Does it give partial credit?
Yes — that is the core capability. The system reads the handwritten steps shown, not just the final answer. A student who sets up the problem correctly but makes an arithmetic error gets credit for the setup. The grader awards points from the process.
What happens if it gets a grade wrong?
The Desk — the built-in teacher-review layer — surfaces every grade before any report is issued. The system flags low-confidence work (for example, graph-heavy problems where handwritten graphs are hard to parse) and routes those directly to you. You override any grade; the correction propagates to every matching case in the stack. Nothing reaches students until you approve.
How accurate is it?
The grading agreement is described as: it agrees with an experienced teacher about as well as two good teachers agree with each other. The founder checked it against his own Algebra 2 grading. He found it more consistent than himself on the nights he graded when tired — he was handing back different scores for the same work depending on how he felt. The machine applies one standard to paper 1 and paper 150.
What subjects does it work for?
Math only. Algebra 2 is the validated core; Geometry, Pre-calculus, Calculus, Statistics, and middle-school math are in scope. Science is not in scope.
How long does a full class set take?
Digital Red Pen grades every exam in parallel — each paper read independently, at the same time — so a full class set finishes in roughly the time a single exam takes, not one-after-another. We will publish typical timing once we have measured the reworked system.