Three Things I Didn’t Know Redmenta AI Could Do – and Now I Use Them Every Week

Three Things I Didn’t Know Redmenta AI Could Do – and Now I Use Them Every Week

This story was shared with us by Anna Kovács, a high school English teacher who has been using Redmenta for years. She teaches grades 10–12 and recently discovered some features that changed her weekly routine. Here’s her experience in her own words.

When I first started experimenting with Redmenta, I thought of it as just a tool for quickly building worksheets. That alone would have been enough to save me time. But over the past months, I’ve discovered that Redmenta’s features and AI assistants can do much more, and some of these features have quietly become essential to my weekly teaching routine.

Here are three Redmenta tools I didn’t know existed at first, and now I can’t imagine planning lessons without them.

1. AI Lesson Planning That Actually Feels Like Teaching Support

Planning lessons for grades 10, 11, and 12 means balancing grammar, literature, writing, and exam prep: all while trying to differentiate for students at different levels. In the past, I sometimes found myself staring at a blank page, trying to come up with a lesson structure that covered everything.

That’s when I tried Redmenta’s “Lesson Planner” AI Assistant. Instead of generating something generic, it gives me a detailed, teacher-like outline.

For example, when I asked it to plan a lesson on argumentative essay writing for my 11th graders, here’s what it produced:

Objectives: Students will understand the structure and key components of an argumentative essay, analyse effective arguments, and begin developing their own argumentative essay on a relevant topic.

Materials: Whiteboard, projector, sample argumentative essays, handouts on essay structure, devices for research for students (if available, e.g. laptops, tablet computers), Redmenta worksheets.

Activities: The Assistant created a whole table with the phases of the lesson, including activities, learning outcomes, and timing for each phase. It also suggested a Redmenta worksheet suitable for each phase. I want to share a sneak peek of the lesson plan in the table format the AI Assistant created for me: 

The lesson plan appeared to be so detailed and thorough. I have not seen anything like that on other platforms for teachers! 

And the best part? After generating a lesson plan in the table format, the Assistant asked me which of the suggested worksheets I would like to generate next: Which worksheet idea would you like to generate for your lesson? (Entry Ticket, Reading Comprehension, Concept Mapping, Creative Writing, or Exit Ticket) That means I don’t just get a plan, I get ready-to-use materials.

Now, instead of spending 45 minutes building a lesson outline from scratch, I spend 10 minutes refining what the “Lesson Planner” AI Assistant drafts for me.

2. Redmentalizer: Breathing New Life Into Old Worksheets

Every English teacher has a folder of printed worksheets that have been battle-tested and loved over the years. Mine included grammar drills, short reading comprehension passages, and even some creative writing prompts. The problem? They were paper-only, and I had no time to retype them into digital form. Until I discovered the Redmentalizer, Redmenta’s worksheet scanner.

Here’s a recent example: I had an old printed worksheet where students had to identify the passive voice in a short news article. I scanned it and uploaded it to the Redmentalizer, and within seconds, I had a fully digital version of the worksheet with a text passage and multiple-choice questions after it.

Now my students can: complete the task on their devices, work remotely if they’re absent, and even get instant feedback (in the “Assisted learning” mode on Redmenta). 

What used to sit forgotten in a binder has become part of my weekly digital toolkit. I’ve slowly been scanning my favorite “old but gold” worksheets, and the students appreciate the variety because they’re not just seeing what I found online last night, they’re getting a mix of classic and fresh material carefully generated to support their learning.

3. AI-Generated Audio for Listening Tasks

Listening practice has always been one of the hardest skills to prepare for. Finding suitable audio recordings that match my students’ level and the topic we’re covering often took more time than I had. That’s when I realized Redmenta could generate audio content with tasks automatically.

Here’s how I use it: I create an AI Assistant and write a simple prompt, like:

“Generate a dialogue about two people discussing climate change and five multiple-choice questions on the content of the dialogue. Make it suitable for 10th-grade English learners.”

Within moments, the assistant gives me: a natural-sounding audio dialogue generated by AI voices and a set of comprehension questions already tailored to the text. Instead of spending an hour searching YouTube or textbooks for something that “kind of fits,” I now get customized listening materials in just minutes.

Last week, for example, I asked for a short monologue about social media addiction with comprehension questions. The AI generated a perfect listening activity in the podcast format that tied directly into our class discussion on digital well-being. My students were more engaged because the content felt current and relevant to them. Now I make at least one AI-generated listening task every week, and it has completely transformed how I approach listening practice.

Why These Three Features Changed My Routine

I didn’t expect Redmenta to support me beyond worksheet generation, but these three tools have had a real impact on my teaching:

Instead of spending my evenings planning and searching, I can now spend more time on what matters most: giving feedback, building relationships with students, and actually teaching.

So, if you’ve been using Redmenta only to create worksheets manually, take it from me: explore the other tools and assistants. You might find a hidden gem that becomes part of your weekly routine, too.

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