Student Writing Program WriQ Speeds Grading-Feedback Cycle

Education technology company Texthelp has released a new online program to help students improve their writing. WriQ automates and standardizes the assessment of student writing against national norms, evaluating each student's writing across multiple criteria. The idea is to help teachers assess writing proficiency more efficiently and give students more personalized feedback.

WriQ provides "positive nudge" notifications and digital achievement badges each time students write more. A student dashboard displays real-time feedback, allowing them to choose to refine their writing without waiting for teacher guidance.

The algorithm that powers the software, named WriQ Score, was developed using data from more than 85,000 teacher-graded documents.

The program was released in beta form in 2019. Now it's available as a free extension through Google Docs or as an add-in for Microsoft Word to teachers and students. A paid version offers additional features, such as a full assessment dashboard and comparisons of writing against national norms.

Student Writing Program WriQ Speeds Grading-Feedback Cycle

According to the company, WriQ can be used across grade levels, from fourth grade through graduate programs, and across core subjects. The paid version of the program for a "defined group" is $10 per student in K-12; a district-wide license is currently $1 per student.

One beta tester said the program cut down the editing and correction time for teachers. According to Sally Garza, teacher and technology director at Ohio's Lawrence School, said the use of the software "leaves me more time for differentiation and 1-to-1 instruction, and I have real data to share with students and parents. Having the data is more persuasive than just a subjective opinion from the teacher.

"The COVID-19 pandemic has called attention to a number of new and long-standing challenges around student motivation and learning loss, as well as the demanding workloads facing our teachers each and every day," said Martin McKay, Texthelp's founder and CEO, in a press release. "WriQ, has been designed with those needs in mind. Not only does it standardize writing assessment in order to give teachers more time to focus on student instruction and support, but it is also designed to motivate and engage students in writing."

About the Author

Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.

Featured

  • robot brain with various technology and business icons

    Google Cloud Study: Early Agentic AI Adopters See Better ROI

    Google Cloud has released its second annual ROI of AI study, finding that 52% of enterprise organizations now deploy AI agents in production environments. The comprehensive survey of 3,466 senior leaders across 24 countries highlights the emergence of a distinct group of "agentic AI early adopters" who are achieving measurably higher returns on their AI investments.

  • AI symbol racing a padlock symbol on a red running track

    AI Surpasses Cybersecurity in State Education Leader Priority List

    For the first time, artificial intelligence has moved to the top of the priority list for state education leaders — knocking cybersecurity from the number one spot, according to the 2025 State EdTech Trends report from SETDA.

  • Digital Money Bag on Circuit Board Background

    New AI Grants Program to Fund AI Infrastructure for K–12 Education

    Digital Promise has announced the launch of the K-12 AI Infrastructure Program, a multi-year initiative "aiming to close the gap between scientific principles of teaching and learning and the promise of generative artificial intelligence."

  • Red alert symbols and email icons floating in a dark digital space

    Report: Cyber Attackers Are Fully Embracing AI

    According to Google Cloud's 2026 Cybersecurity Forecast, AI will become standard for both cyber attackers and defenders, with threats expanding to virtualization systems, blockchain networks, and nation-state operations.