Review handwritten practice with more clarity · See how parents use ChalkBerry

From uploaded pages to a clearer plan for the next week of study

ChalkBerry is designed to keep handwritten-practice review understandable. Families can follow the path from raw pages to scoring logic, confidence signals, topic patterns, and revision priorities.

1. Start with real practice work

Upload handwritten worksheets, long answers, or completed question papers as photos or PDFs. The goal is to work with the kind of practice families already have, not force a different routine.

2. Review how the result was reached

ChalkBerry keeps question-level feedback, scoring structure, and confidence handling visible enough that parents can understand whether a result is dependable and where the answer went off track.

3. Turn the report into revision decisions

The most useful outcome is not a score alone. It is knowing what weak topics to revisit, which answer habits are repeating, and what to do before the next test.

How it works

A review loop parents can actually follow

Every assessment moves from uploaded handwritten work to scoring logic, report clarity, and next-step revision guidance.

1

Upload practice sheets

Collect handwritten answers, answer keys, and question papers inside one assessment draft before review starts.

2

Review scoring logic

Confirm marks, rubric expectations, and topic tags so the report reflects how the work should actually be judged.

3

Act on the report

Open the score breakdown, weak-topic view, parent summary, and recommended next-step study actions.

Report preview

Readable enough for parents, detailed enough for revision

A strong report does more than show a score. It explains where marks were lost, what topics are repeating, and what the student should do next.

Parents usually need one thing first: clarity. ChalkBerry keeps the score, confidence signals, topic view, and recommended next-step actions tied to the same evidence so the report is easier to trust and easier to use.

Students can then move from “I got less than expected” to “I need to fix answer structure, chapter recall, or timed-paper habits before the next test.”

Parent summary

A release-ready report combines the final score, the confidence signal, the topic view, and the next recommended study actions in one place.

Question feedback

Question-by-question scoring

Marks, extracted answer text, and improvement notes stay aligned to the same question instead of getting buried inside one final score.

Confidence-aware review

Low-confidence handwriting or weak recognizability is flagged before a report is treated as fully reliable.

Topic view

Algebra setupNeeds work
Long-answer structureImproving
Science recallStrong

Turn every practice sheet into a clearer next step.

Upload handwritten work, review where marks are being lost, and decide what your child should revise next without building a manual marking system at home.