AI Essay Grading for Australian English Exams
Write a practice essay, get AI feedback scored against VCE, HSC, WACE, and QCE marking rubrics — in seconds. Improve your band score before the real thing.
Essay writing is one of the highest-stakes components of Australian Year 11 & 12 English exams — and one of the hardest to practise without feedback. Revizi’s AI essay grading gives you rubric-based feedback on analytical essays, comparative essays, creative responses, and source analysis tasks in seconds. Practice questions are drawn from a bank of exam-style prompts for VCE English, HSC English Advanced, WACE English, and QCE English. AI grading is designed for practice and self-assessment — results are approximate and may not match official exam marking standards. Always review AI feedback critically and use it alongside teacher guidance.
How It Works
Choose Your Essay Type
Select analytical essay, comparative essay, creative writing, language analysis, or source analysis. Pick from practice questions or use your own.
Write Your Essay
Type or paste your response. Timed mode available to simulate real exam conditions.
AI Grades Against Rubric
Revizi’s AI scores your essay against the relevant curriculum rubric — VCAA, NESA, SCSA, or QCAA marking criteria.
Get Band Score Comparison
See which band your response falls into and get specific feedback on how to improve argument, evidence, structure, and expression.
Benefits
Rubric-Based Feedback
Not generic AI feedback — scoring is designed around curriculum marking criteria, so you can see where marks are likely won or lost.
Exam-Style Practice Questions
Practice with exam-style questions inspired by VCE English past exams, HSC Advanced English questions, WACE English exams, and QCE English assessments.
Band Score Comparison
See which band your essay falls into (A-E or equivalent) with clear explanation of what distinguishes the next band up.
Timed Writing Mode
Set a timer to simulate real exam conditions. Build the habit of structuring and completing a response within exam time limits.
All Essay Types
Analytical, comparative, creative writing, language analysis, source analysis — all the essay formats your English exam includes.
Free to Try
Start practising with no credit card required. Upgrade to Pro for higher grading limits and access to the full question bank.
Frequently Asked Questions
What essay types does Revizi support?
Revizi supports analytical essays (argument/theme analysis), comparative essays (two texts or perspectives), creative writing responses, language analysis (persuasive techniques), and source analysis tasks. All types are available for VCE, HSC, WACE, and QCE English.
Are the questions from real past exams?
The question bank is inspired by past exam questions and exam-style prompts aligned to each curriculum. Revizi uses original exam-style questions because actual VCAA/NESA/SCSA/QCAA papers are copyright protected. The prompts aim to reflect common exam difficulty and style without reproducing official papers.
How does AI essay grading work?
You submit your essay response and Revizi’s AI evaluates it against the marking criteria for your curriculum (e.g. VCAA English study design rubric, NESA marking guidelines). The AI provides a band score estimate and specific feedback on argument structure, use of evidence, analytical language, and expression.
Is essay grading included in the free plan?
Yes. You can try essay grading with no credit card required. The free plan includes a limited number of essay submissions. Upgrade to Pro for higher limits and access to the full exam-style question bank.
What curricula does essay grading cover?
Essay grading is available for VCE English (VCAA), HSC English Advanced (NESA), WACE English (SCSA), and QCE English (QCAA). Each curriculum uses its own rubric-specific scoring criteria.
How accurate is AI essay grading?
AI grading provides directional feedback based on curriculum rubrics but is not a substitute for teacher assessment. Use it to identify areas for improvement in structure, evidence, and expression — then refine your response before the real exam. Always consult your teacher for authoritative assessment guidance.
Last updated: March 2026