An AI tutor built for WACE.
English, Maths Methods, Specialist Maths, Chemistry, Biology, Physics, Human Biology and more. Edapt rebuilds every WACE ATAR topic to match how you learn and marks your practice against SCSA criteria. Free for everyone, no card.
WACE subjects Edapt covers
English
Extended response, analytical writing and language study, with essay structure and evidence integration tailored to your learning style.
Mathematics Methods
Calculus, functions, probability and statistics, with step-by-step solutions pitched to your VARK profile and external exam practice.
Chemistry
Atomic structure, stoichiometry, acids and bases, equilibrium and organic chemistry, with worked calculations and visual mechanism guides.
Biology
Cells, genetics, evolution and ecosystems, with concept maps for visual learners and structured notes for reading-led learners.
Physics
Motion, fields, waves, thermodynamics and modern physics, with narrated walkthroughs and exam-style problem sets.
Human Biology
Physiology, genetics and health, with diagram-based revision for visual learners and case-study examples across every unit.
Why WACE students need an adaptive tutor
WACE ATAR courses demand precision. The external exam tests your ability to apply knowledge accurately under time pressure, and the school-based component requires sustained performance across the whole year. A resource that only covers content without adapting to how you personally process ideas leaves a lot of marks on the table.
Edapt builds revision lessons around the SCSA syllabus content for your subject, scores your extended responses with criterion-by-criterion feedback and uses spaced repetition so the ideas stay with you from Week 1 through to the external exam in November.
Marked like an assessor, not a chatbot
Illustrative example. Generic AI gives everyone the same note. Edapt marks against SCSA (the School Curriculum and Standards Authority of Western Australia) criteria.
Solid essay. Consider adding more analysis and strengthening your conclusion.
The text positions the reader to question societal norms through the author's deliberate use of irony, which operates at both a structural and tonal level.
- Understanding of text and context
- 13 of 18
- Construction and development of argument
- 11 of 16
- Expression, accuracy and textual evidence
- 9 of 14
- Push the irony point further by naming how the irony operates at a structural level, for example by contrasting the narrator's stated values with their actions in the opening and closing scenes.
- Open at least two paragraphs with the critical idea rather than with the author's name. It signals that your argument is driving the analysis, not the plot.
WACE AI tutor: common questions
Is Edapt aligned to the current SCSA syllabuses?
Yes. When you set your WACE subjects, Edapt tailors every lesson to the current SCSA ATAR course content for your subject, using the right key concepts and the question styles that appear in external exams.
Can it help with school-based assessment tasks?
Yes. Paste your task description or upload a practice draft and Edapt builds feedback around the SCSA marking criteria for that task type, so you can improve before you submit.
How does the grade feedback work?
Edapt scores your practice response against the published SCSA grade descriptors, shows criterion-by-criterion results and explains precisely what the next grade up requires. It is a study tool, not an official SCSA result.
Is the WACE tutor free to use?
Yes, completely. Edapt is free for every student, no card and no catch.
Revise your next WACE topic the way you actually learn.
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