What is Flint and How Can I Use It To Teach?
Flint offers personalized learning, using AI, across a range of subjects
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Flint is an AI tool designed to offer personalized learning, and teaching, to students and educators in a very effective way.
Unlike many of the ever-appearing new AI tools out there, this is designed from the ground up as a way to make learning better. That's where this stands out. Rather than acting as a generic chatbot, it is designed specifically for classroom use, with guardrails, analytics, and structured activities that aim to keep teachers in control.
This is about extending teaching by giving each student something closer to one-to-one support, while still aligning with curriculum goals. Offering AI tutoring, assignment creation, and classroom analytics, this is built to make life easier all round.
This guide aims to lay out all you need to know about how Flint could work in your class.
What is Flint?
Flint is an AI-powered learning platform built specifically for K–12 schools, designed to support personalized instruction across subjects including math, science, English, and languages.
Two key parts are available here: one in the AI teaching assistant, to help create lessons, activities, and feedback. But there is also the AI tutor part, called Sparky, which helps students by adapting explanations and supporting individual needs.
Centered around class workflows, these tools help teachers make AI-driven assignments, upload curriculum materials, and define how much help the AI is allowed to give, ranging from gentle guidance to more direct support.
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Usefully, this can be deployed across schools, with admin oversight and LMS integrations, as well as helpful analytics and engagement tracking, all as part of the package.
How does Flint work?
Flint lets teachers create or upload content using items such as worksheets, rubrics, lessons, or external resources as needed. Using that as a foundation, the AI is then able to generate interactive learning activities to be completed.
Students can then interact through the sessions, asking questions, working through problems, or getting writing feedback as they go. This is great for projects, in which structured support can help them work at scale without the need for lots of teacher-based scaffolding along the way -- potentially helping build confidence, too.
The system uses large language models with tools such as web search, code-based calculations, and translation to improve accuracy and flexibility.
Teachers keep control throughout, since they can design and implement guardrails. This includes preventing the AI from giving direct answers or requiring it to guide students through reasoning instead, for example.
Admins and teachers can also view interaction histories, allowing for transparency and safeguarding, with automatic flagging of inappropriate content.
What are the best Flint features?
Flint is all about that AI tutoring for students to feel supported and engaged with at their level -- helping high achievers progress at their pace while anyone struggling can be supported to grow comfortably.
The ability to implement guardrails is a huge positive for educators. They can define how the AI behaves, ensuring it supports learning without simply giving answers.
The use of content already available, such as teacher materials currently in use, is a really powerful way that this extends teaching and learning without going from scratch. It can also help sticking to current lesson plans and standards easily.
Feedback is powerful here with real-time looks at student performance and engagement. This is individual but also with a general overview across the class.
When it comes to assignments, this AI can help with deadlines, time limits, and follow-up activities. At the same time it supports multimodal learning tools with text-to-speech, speech-to-text, image processing, and even graphing and code support for STEM subjects.
All that, plus it integrates with LMS and SIS, such as Google Classroom, to make integration and deployment an easy part of the process also.
How much does Flint cost?
Flint offers a free tier for up to 80 users, making it accessible for individual teachers or small pilots.
Paid plans are structured by school size, starting at around: $3,000/year for smaller deployments. This scales to custom pricing for larger institutions.
Paid tiers add features including LMS/SIS integration, advanced analytics, and dedicated support.
Flint best tips and tricks
Start with one class
Pilot the platform with a single group to refine how you want the AI to behave before scaling.
Set clear guardrails early
Define whether the AI should guide, hint, or explain, to shape student learning habits from the start.
Upload your own materials
Ground the AI in your curriculum to improve relevance and reduces generic responses.
Luke Edwards is a freelance writer and editor with more than two decades of experience covering tech, science, and health. He writes for many publications covering health tech, software and apps, digital teaching tools, VPNs, TV, audio, smart home, antivirus, broadband, smartphones, cars and much more.
