Not all AI is created equal
When people hear "AI assistant for schools," they often think of generic chatbots. The kind that give vague answers or confidently state things that aren't true.
That's a valid concern. But there's a fundamental difference between a general-purpose AI and one that's grounded in your school's actual information.
How it works
AnswerQuest doesn't make things up. When someone asks a question, here's what happens:
- Searches your school's uploaded documents, policies, calendars, and Q&A pairs
- Finds the most relevant information for the question
- Generates a clear answer based on what it found
- Cites the source so the reader can verify it
If the information isn't in your knowledge base, the AI says so. It doesn't guess.
Why sources matter
Every answer includes a citation. The specific document, Q&A entry, or webpage where the information came from. This isn't a nice-to-have. It's the foundation of trust.
A parent asks "Is school closed on Friday?" The answer says "Yes, per the 2025-26 school calendar." That parent can trust it. If the calendar changes, the answer changes too, because it's always pulling from current sources.
Auto-configured for your school
When you upload your documents, AnswerQuest doesn't just store them. It analyzes the content and automatically configures the AI's personality. How it introduces itself, what tone it uses, what rules it follows. No setup required.
The result is an AI assistant that sounds like it belongs at your school. Because it was shaped by your school's actual content.