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How the EduBijak app is making SPM prep fun

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Write an article about Lee Ching Wei says EduBijak is not meant to replace teachers or tuition classes. (Hizami Safri @ FMT Lifestyle)
PETALING JAYA: Meet Kimi, the grouchy chemistry bot who gets impatient when you don’t revise. Or Bio-nee, your friendly biology companion who walks you through each answer.

These aren’t just quirky mascots – they’re AI-powered characters built into EduBijak, a new revision app designed by education consultancy firm EduAdvisor to make preparing for the SPM examinations more engaging, accessible, and even fun.

Unlike traditional past‑year papers that only give you an answer sheet, EduBijak quizzes you with real exam‑style multiple‑choice questions, immediately showing you why each option is right – or wrong.

“The explanation part is really important for students because that’s what’s missing with your traditional workbooks,” explained Lee Ching Wei, one of EduAdvisor’s directors.

“And it’s not meant to replace teachers or tuition classes,” he cautioned. Instead, EduBijak is meant to make revision fun, competitive, and less tedious.

Got ten minutes waiting for the bus? Knock out two questions. Settling into bed before lights‑out? Quiz yourself on history. And don’t worry. You won’t run out of questions to answer as the app boasts more than 10,000 questions.

Points for correct answers, reminders to revise, leaderboard standings and league tables with friends inject a competitive spark.

“That sense of achievement – getting a question right and seeing your rank – is a little addictive,” Lee laughed.

But it’s not just fun and games. Behind the quirky bots and quiz battles is a serious academic backbone. Whether you prefer Bahasa Malaysia or English, the app has you covered. It supports eight core subjects: history, chemistry, biology, mathematics, and economics, with plans to add English, additional mathematics, and more.

app The app will explain to you why your answer is right or wrong. (Hizami Safri @ FMT Lifestyle)

All questions are mapped to the Malaysian National Curriculum (KSSM) syllabus, drawn from actual SPM past‑year and trial papers, so you know you’re revising the right material. The best part? It’s 100% free.

“We always knew we wanted to make this a social initiative,” Lee explained. “Students don’t have money, and we want this to have a wider impact. Most already have a smartphone. As long as you’ve got the internet, you can use EduBijak.”

Even students in rural areas or East Malaysia, who may not attend tuition or have access to fancy prep materials, can jump in. The app runs light on battery and data, works on older phones, and is available in both English and Bahasa Malaysia.

EduBijak’s journey wasn’t without its hiccups. In late 2023, version one – powered by an early OpenAI model – offered just three subjects on a basic web interface.

“It hallucinated a lot,” Lee admitted. “Accuracy was about 80%, and students gave up after a few tries.”

Fast forward to last August, and AI had leapfrogged forward. Vision capabilities meant the app could handle charts, while costs plummeted. After re‑engineering the backend for speed and efficiency, the team relaunched a vastly improved web version covering five subjects.

interface With leaderboards and quirky chatbot characters, EduBijak aims to make revisions fun. (EduAdvisor pic)

User feedback was so enthusiastic that by October they’d added three more subjects, and 5,000 students signed up in three months. “All of them said essentially it was good,” Lee recalled.

Today’s app version, launched in April, boasts 99.9% accuracy. If you spot an error, it’s probably because the original answer sheet was flawed.

The team is already cooking up new features: dictation for students who rather listen than read, a forum-style Q&A for peer and teacher support, and support for typed answers in English and Bahasa Malaysia. Subject expansion continues too, with accounting and languages on the docket.

EduBijak isn’t just built for students – it’s designed with teachers in mind too. “We are engaging schools as well, just to get a lot more feedback on how to help them,” said Lee.

Many teachers currently prepare their own questions or rely on Google Forms, “which is not the best experience.” By using EduBijak, Lee said teachers would be “potentially reducing their workload, yet having enough information to help the students that need help.”

So, if you’re a Form 4 or Form 5 student – or a parent looking for a smarter way to support SPM revision – EduBijak offers an AI‑powered study buddy that’s always by your side.

And with its fun characters, instant feedback and unwavering dedication to accessibility, exam prep may just become the best part of your day.

Find out more about EduBijak here.

in 1000-1500 words .Organize the content with appropriate headings and subheadings (h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6), Retain any existing tags from lee Lee Ching Wei says EduBijak is not meant to replace teachers or tuition classes. (Hizami Safri @ FMT Lifestyle)
PETALING JAYA: Meet Kimi, the grouchy chemistry bot who gets impatient when you don’t revise. Or Bio-nee, your friendly biology companion who walks you through each answer.

These aren’t just quirky mascots – they’re AI-powered characters built into EduBijak, a new revision app designed by education consultancy firm EduAdvisor to make preparing for the SPM examinations more engaging, accessible, and even fun.

Unlike traditional past‑year papers that only give you an answer sheet, EduBijak quizzes you with real exam‑style multiple‑choice questions, immediately showing you why each option is right – or wrong.

“The explanation part is really important for students because that’s what’s missing with your traditional workbooks,” explained Lee Ching Wei, one of EduAdvisor’s directors.

“And it’s not meant to replace teachers or tuition classes,” he cautioned. Instead, EduBijak is meant to make revision fun, competitive, and less tedious.

Got ten minutes waiting for the bus? Knock out two questions. Settling into bed before lights‑out? Quiz yourself on history. And don’t worry. You won’t run out of questions to answer as the app boasts more than 10,000 questions.

Points for correct answers, reminders to revise, leaderboard standings and league tables with friends inject a competitive spark.

“That sense of achievement – getting a question right and seeing your rank – is a little addictive,” Lee laughed.

But it’s not just fun and games. Behind the quirky bots and quiz battles is a serious academic backbone. Whether you prefer Bahasa Malaysia or English, the app has you covered. It supports eight core subjects: history, chemistry, biology, mathematics, and economics, with plans to add English, additional mathematics, and more.

app The app will explain to you why your answer is right or wrong. (Hizami Safri @ FMT Lifestyle)

All questions are mapped to the Malaysian National Curriculum (KSSM) syllabus, drawn from actual SPM past‑year and trial papers, so you know you’re revising the right material. The best part? It’s 100% free.

“We always knew we wanted to make this a social initiative,” Lee explained. “Students don’t have money, and we want this to have a wider impact. Most already have a smartphone. As long as you’ve got the internet, you can use EduBijak.”

Even students in rural areas or East Malaysia, who may not attend tuition or have access to fancy prep materials, can jump in. The app runs light on battery and data, works on older phones, and is available in both English and Bahasa Malaysia.

EduBijak’s journey wasn’t without its hiccups. In late 2023, version one – powered by an early OpenAI model – offered just three subjects on a basic web interface.

“It hallucinated a lot,” Lee admitted. “Accuracy was about 80%, and students gave up after a few tries.”

Fast forward to last August, and AI had leapfrogged forward. Vision capabilities meant the app could handle charts, while costs plummeted. After re‑engineering the backend for speed and efficiency, the team relaunched a vastly improved web version covering five subjects.

interface With leaderboards and quirky chatbot characters, EduBijak aims to make revisions fun. (EduAdvisor pic)

User feedback was so enthusiastic that by October they’d added three more subjects, and 5,000 students signed up in three months. “All of them said essentially it was good,” Lee recalled.

Today’s app version, launched in April, boasts 99.9% accuracy. If you spot an error, it’s probably because the original answer sheet was flawed.

The team is already cooking up new features: dictation for students who rather listen than read, a forum-style Q&A for peer and teacher support, and support for typed answers in English and Bahasa Malaysia. Subject expansion continues too, with accounting and languages on the docket.

EduBijak isn’t just built for students – it’s designed with teachers in mind too. “We are engaging schools as well, just to get a lot more feedback on how to help them,” said Lee.

Many teachers currently prepare their own questions or rely on Google Forms, “which is not the best experience.” By using EduBijak, Lee said teachers would be “potentially reducing their workload, yet having enough information to help the students that need help.”

So, if you’re a Form 4 or Form 5 student – or a parent looking for a smarter way to support SPM revision – EduBijak offers an AI‑powered study buddy that’s always by your side.

And with its fun characters, instant feedback and unwavering dedication to accessibility, exam prep may just become the best part of your day.

Find out more about EduBijak here.

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