Mount Carmel School · Value Education
Sign in with your Google account and your lessons, templates and key follow you on every device.
Your data is stored in your own Google Drive (a private app folder) and synced across your devices.
“The fear of the LORD is the beginning of knowledge.” — Proverbs 1:7
Set up the class
Use any one of these — or combine them.
Free tier covers 2.5 Flash; models marked * need billing. Get a key at aistudio.google.com/apikey — it stays on this device.
Enter a topic, a passage, or both — then build a complete, teachable lesson.
Two ways to do it — both need a Canva account (the free one or your school's paid plan), on a computer.
Downloads your finished slides and opens Canva. In Canva, drag the file onto the page (or click Upload) — it becomes editable slides with your exact lesson content, ready to restyle.
Copies a ready-made prompt about your topic and opens Canva's AI presentation maker. Click the prompt box, paste (Ctrl/Cmd+V), and press Enter. Quicker, but the wording comes out more generic than your lesson.
A formal lesson-plan table for administrators. “One-page PDF” squeezes the whole plan onto a single page.
Lesson Planner helps teachers create complete, teachable Value-Education and Bible lessons. Enter a topic, a passage, or both; the AI service you choose (using your own key) writes the lesson, and you can refine it in plain language. Export to Word, PDF, or PowerPoint, build a formal lesson plan for admins, or turn it into Canva slides.
Your user name and key are stored only on this device. Lessons are generated by your chosen AI provider; scripture is shown from public-domain translations (or a faithful Hindi rendering) so it prints correctly. Drafts and templates are saved on this device under your user name.
Each time you build or refine a lesson, a copy is kept here on this device. Tap View to preview an earlier version, or Restore to bring it back.
Lesson text is generated by your chosen AI service using your own key. Scripture is shown from public-domain translations (or a faithful translation for Hindi) so it prints correctly.
PDF export uses your browser's “Save as PDF”. PowerPoint export loads a small library once while online.