What is the app Smart Lesson Generator?

Thomas Gardner
A teacher stood next to a young students desk, the student sat at the desk is high fiving his teacher
Reading time: 3 minutes

How much of your valuable time is spent on planning and administrative tasks instead of teaching? While 93% of educators start their careers to positively impact students' lives, over 75% end up overwhelmed by these non-teaching duties. But we have a tool to help lighten the load.

Introducing app Smart Lesson Generator– a fast, integrated and efficient solution to streamline lesson planning, allowing you to focus on teaching. Let’s explore the Smart Lesson Generator:

Meet the new app Smart Lesson Generator

The app Smart Lesson Generator allows you to create engaging and appropriate lesson plans in seconds. It is connected with app courses designed by experts and aligned with the Global Scale of English (GSE) to ensure effectiveness.

*Smart Lesson Generator is currently available for a select number of titles, with a phased rollout continuing through 2025 and 2026

Ready to go in under 60 seconds

Choose your courseware, the proficiency level of your class and the specific activity you want to create. Within seconds, you’ll receive an activity that's ready to use. You can effortlessly regenerate to adjust, expand or tailor activities to suit all learners. There's no need to waste time altering generic lesson plans, as each activity is thoughtfully designed for different learning levels.

Easy to use with no generation limits

Smart Lesson Generator is user friendly, requiring no new tools or extra logins. You can access it directly through your app English Portal. Additionally, there are no restrictions on the number of activities you can create. Feel free to regenerate activities as often as needed, ensuring your lessons remain effective for today’s learners.

What courses is Smart Lesson Generator connected to?

Smart Lesson Generator integrates effortlessly with the course, unit and exact lesson you’re teaching, bringing your lessons to life in seconds. Smart Lesson Generatoris currently connected to:

  • Roadmap
  • Gold Experience (Second Edition)
  • Future

With more titles coming throughout 2025 and 2026.

Designed by experts and benchmarked to the GSE

Crafted by education specialists, our tailored technology is developed by teachers for teachers, incorporating the latest teaching methodologies and pedagogical techniques.

Every activity is rooted in proven teaching practices and aligns with the Global Scale of English (GSE), guaranteeing an appropriate degree of challenge for your classroom.

Discover the learning science that informs the Smart Lesson Generator by exploring Enhancing education with AI: Introducing the Smart Lesson Generator.

Hear from our educators

"As a teacher familiar with the app Global Scale of English (GSE), you’ll find the Smart Lesson Generator to be an invaluable AI tool. It creates activities precisely matched to the GSE score you provide, ensuring they perfectly suit your students’ needs. You can use it with app’s coursebooks or design your own lessons, saving you time. Plus, it’s constantly evolving with input from app’s experts and educators worldwide, making it a cutting-edge and well-deserved addition to your teaching toolbox."

Le Dinh Bao Quoc (Dr.),Founder and CEO, Pro.Ed Education Solutions

"With Smart Lesson Generator, teachers can quickly generate engaging lessons and activities aligned with the Global Scale of English, allowing them to focus on personalised learning and student progress.”

Rosa María Cely Herrera,International Education Consultant

Try out the Smart Lesson Generator

Join the revolution in lesson planning with the app Smart Lesson Generator. Empower your teaching and inspire your students with activities that are fast, connected and effective.

More blogs from app

  • A young child sat at a desk in a classroom writing

    Grammar: how to tame the unruly beast

    By Simon Buckland

    “Grammar, which knows how to control even kings”- ѴDZè

    When you think of grammar, “rule” is probably the first word that pops into your mind. Certainly the traditional view of grammar is that it’s about the “rules of language”. Indeed, not so long ago, teaching a language meant just teaching grammatical rules, plus perhaps a few vocabulary lists. However, I’m going to suggest that there’s actually no such thing as a grammatical rule.

    To show you what I mean, let’s take the comparative of adjectives: “bigger”, “smaller”, “more useful”, “more interesting”, etc. We might start with a simple rule: for adjectives with one syllable, add -er, and for adjectives with two or more syllables, use more + adjective.

    But this doesn’t quite work: yes, we say “more useful”, but we also say “cleverer”, and “prettier”. OK then, suppose we modify the rule. Let’s also say that for two-syllable adjectives ending in -y or -er you add -er.

    Unfortunately, this doesn’t quite work either: we do say “cleverer”, but we also say “more sober” and “more proper”. And there are problems with some of the one-syllable adjectives too: we say “more real” and “more whole” rather than “realer” or “wholer”. If we modify the rule to fit these exceptions, it will be half a page long, and anyway, if we keep looking we’ll find yet more exceptions. This happens repeatedly in English grammar. Very often, rules seem so full of exceptions that they’re just not all that helpful.

    And there’s another big problem with the “rule approach”: it doesn’t tell you what the structure is actually used for, even with something as obvious as the comparative of adjectives. You might assume that it’s used for comparing things: “My house is smaller than Mary’s”; “John is more attractive than Stephen”. But look at this: “The harder you work, the more money you make.” Or this: “London is getting more and more crowded.” Both sentences use comparative adjectives, but they’re not directly comparing two things.

    What we’re actually looking at here is not a rule but several overlapping patterns, or paradigms to use the correct technical term:

    1. adjective + -er + than
    2. more + adjective + than
    3. parallel comparative adjectives: the + comparative adjective 1 … the + comparative adjective 2
    4. repeated comparative adjective: adjective + -er + and + adjective + -er/more and more + adjective

    This picture is more accurate, but it looks abstract and technical. It’s a long way from what we actually teach these days and the way we teach it, which tends to be organized around learning objectives and measurable outcomes, such as: “By the end of this lesson (or module) my students should be able to compare their own possessions with someone else’s possessions”. So we’re not teaching our students to memorize a rule or even to manipulate a pattern; we’re teaching them to actually do something in the real world. And, of course, we’re teaching it at a level appropriate for the student’s level.

    So, to come back to grammar, once we’ve established our overall lesson or module objective, here are some of the things we’re going to need to know.

    • What grammatical forms (patterns) can be used to express this objective?
    • Which ones are appropriate for the level of my students? Are there some that they should already know, or should I teach them in this lesson?
    • What do the forms look like in practice? What would be some good examples?

    Existing grammar textbooks generally don’t provide all this information; in particular, they’re very vague about level. Often they don’t even put grammar structures into specific CEFR levels but into a range, e.g. A1/A2 or A2/B1, and none fully integrates grammar with overall learning objectives.

    At app, we’ve set ourselves the goal of addressing these issues by developing a new type of grammar resource for English teachers and learners that:

    • Is based on the Global Scale of English with its precise gradation of developing learner proficiency
    • Is built on the Council of Europe language syllabuses, linking grammar to CEFR level and to language functions
    • Uses international teams of language experts to review the structures and assess their levels

    We include grammar in the GSE Teacher Toolkit, and you can use it to:

    • Search for grammar structures either by GSE or CEFR level
    • Search for grammar structures by keyword or grammatical category/part of speech
    • Find out at which level a given grammar structure should be taught
    • Find out which grammar structures support a given learning objective
    • Find out which learning objectives are related to a given grammar structure
    • Get examples for any given grammar structure
    • Get free teaching materials for many of the grammar structures

    Think of it as an open-access resource for anyone teaching English and designing a curriculum.