LessonDraft vs Brisk Teaching

Brisk Teaching and LessonDraft both speed up teacher prep, but they live in different places. Brisk is a Chrome extension layered on Google Docs, Slides, and Classroom; LessonDraft is a standalone web app with deeper, structured planning and grading tools. Here's an honest comparison.

Feature Comparison

FeatureLessonDraftBrisk Teaching
Where it worksStandalone web app — no extension or Google account requiredChrome extension inside Google Docs/Slides/Classroom
Best forStructured planning, assessment, and gradingIn-workflow prep for Google-centric teachers
Bulk generationBulk report cards and bulk gradingBulk Generate across lesson, notes, quiz, slides from one source
Custom plan structureDrag-and-drop section editorWorks within Google Docs formatting
Content blocksReusable snippets for routines and differentiationNot available
IEP goals & report cardsDedicated toolsFeedback and resources, less dedicated planning depth
AI writing detectionNot offeredYes — inspects student writing history
Free tier15 generations/month, no credit cardFree for individual teachers
Paid pricing$7/mo ProPro around $9.99/mo; Premium often quote-based (confirm current pricing)
Student-data privacyFERPA-friendly — no student data storedData agreements available on request for schools

Brisk Teaching — Pros & Cons

Pros

  • +Lives where Google teachers already work — zero workflow change
  • +Bulk Generate creates a lesson, notes, quiz, and slides from one source at once
  • +Free forever for individual educators
  • +AI writing-detection feature for spotting student AI use

Cons

  • -Requires Chrome and a Google-centric workflow
  • -Less structured, dedicated planning depth than a standalone planning suite
  • -No reusable content blocks or custom plan-structure editor
  • -No dedicated IEP goal or report card tools with subject/trait control

Why Teachers Choose LessonDraft

  • 1.If you don't live entirely in Google Docs — or you teach somewhere that restricts extensions — LessonDraft is a standalone app that works anywhere, no Chrome required.
  • 2.Dedicated, deep tools for IEP goals, report cards, and grading feedback that a general in-doc assistant doesn't match.
  • 3.Custom plan structures and reusable content blocks to standardize how you plan.
  • 4.FERPA-friendly: no student data is stored, ever.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Brisk Teaching better than LessonDraft?
It depends on how you work. If you live inside Google Docs, Slides, and Classroom, Brisk's in-browser, no-workflow-change approach is hard to beat and it's free for individuals. If you want a standalone, structured planning and grading suite — with dedicated IEP, report card, and grading tools and deeper customization — LessonDraft is the better fit.
Does LessonDraft work inside Google Docs like Brisk?
No — LessonDraft is a standalone web app, not a Chrome extension. You generate in LessonDraft and copy or export the result wherever you need it. The upside is it works on any device or browser and doesn't require a Google account or extension permissions.
Which is cheaper?
Brisk is free forever for individual teachers, with a Pro tier around $9.99/mo. LessonDraft is free for 15 generations/month and $7/mo for Pro. For heavy individual use, both are inexpensive — compare the specific tools you'll actually use.
Can I use both?
Yes. Some teachers use Brisk for quick in-Doc tasks and AI-writing checks, and LessonDraft for structured lesson planning, IEP goals, report cards, and grading. Both have generous free access.

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Free to start — 15 generations per month, no credit card required. See the difference for yourself.

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