Every feature in ScholarBee exists to reduce the time between “I have a PDF” and “I have a quiz” — without sacrificing pedagogical quality.
ScholarBee maps every question to one of Bloom's six cognitive levels — from Remembering and Understanding to Applying, Analyzing, Evaluating, and Creating. You get well-structured assessments, not random trivia.
Your uploaded PDF is the source of truth. Every question is anchored to your specific content — lecture notes, textbooks, or study guides — not generic AI output.
Save your generated question sets and revisit them whenever you need. Teachers build a reusable question bank; students build a personalized exam-prep library.
All features are available on the free plan.
Every question maps to one of six cognitive levels from Bloom's Taxonomy — Remembering, Understanding, Applying, Analyzing, Evaluating, or Creating. You pick the level before generation, so the output matches the depth of thinking you want to test.
The AI reads your uploaded material and writes questions about what's actually in it — not generic trivia about the topic. Upload a specific chapter and get questions about that chapter. Your content is the source of truth.
Generated questions come structured and formatted with answer keys. The print view is clean and ready to use — suitable for study guides, practice tests, exam preparation, or assessments.
Generate multiple choice (with four options), true/false, or fill-in-the-blank questions — or mix them in a single session. Each format follows standard academic conventions so output is immediately usable.
Choose how many questions to generate per session — up to 10 per generation. Whether you need a 5-question pop quiz or a 10-item final exam review, you control the volume.
ScholarBee is fully responsive. It works on desktop, tablet, and mobile — so you can generate quiz questions from your phone between classes or from a laptop in your office.
Generate the exact format your exam needs — all from the same PDF upload.
Which process is primarily responsible for producing ATP during cellular respiration?
A. Photosynthesis B. Glycolysis ✓ C. Transpiration D. Osmosis
The Treaty of Versailles, signed in 1919, formally ended World War I.
The atomic number of an element is equal to the number of ______ in its nucleus.
No credit card, no waitlist needed to start. Just upload a PDF and generate your first quiz.