TabMate for educators planning, comparing, and drafting from browser sources
Keep reading lists, source packs, lesson notes, rubric references, and feedback-drafting support tied to one workspace while you work in the browser.
Useful for course prep, source comparison, and rubric-based feedback support. It is not pitched as a final grading or plagiarism decision tool.
The Problem
The browser usually already has the raw material. The hard part is keeping the useful sources, notes, and next steps connected long enough to reuse them.
Prep work spans too many tabs and documents
Lesson planning, reading lists, examples, and notes often sit in separate places even when they belong to the same teaching workflow.
Rubric support loses the source context
Helpful examples and source references are much harder to reuse when the page, excerpt, and draft note are detached from one another.
Course work repeats with no shared memory
Without saved workspaces, each prep cycle starts by reopening the same sources instead of extending the material you already reviewed.
How TabMate helps this research stay grounded
TabMate lets you keep the page evidence, your saved notes, and the reusable workflow in the same place while the work continues. You build your knowledge as you browse.
Keep source pages and prep notes in one workspace
Store the materials you reviewed and the notes you made without losing which source supported which idea.
Draft from selected excerpts and rubric references
Use page-grounded context when preparing lesson outlines, examples, or rubric-based feedback support.
Reuse educator-oriented starter kits
Start common jobs like lesson planning, course building, or feedback drafting from a repeatable structure.
Return to previous prep without rebuilding context
Keep follow-up notes, saved excerpts, and draft outputs ready for the next course iteration.
Automate navigation and extraction with agent mode
Use agent mode to click through course pages, extract content, and interact with source materials automatically — so prep work moves faster without interrupting the research flow.
Some general use cases
When research spreads across tabs, TabMate helps keep the useful parts connected.
Lesson planning from saved source pages and notes
Course material prep with structured research workspaces
Rubric-based feedback support using selected excerpts
Reading pack comparison across articles, docs, and references
One workflow for different kinds of work
No matter what kind of research you do, the core flow stays the same.
Ask from the page you are already reading
Keep the question tied to the current tab or selected text so research starts from evidence instead of memory.
Related pages
Move between the general homepage, the use-case directory, and the deeper pages that match the kind of research you do most often.
General research
See the broader browser research flow when your prep spans sources beyond one teaching workflow.
Use cases directory
Compare the educator page with the other research patterns supported on the site.
About TabMate
Learn what TabMate is built for and the kind of browser work it is designed to keep grounded.
How to summarize multiple browser tabs at once
A repeatable process for multi-tab summaries with source traceability — useful for comparing reading packs and preparing structured materials.
How your data is handled
TabMate uses the current page as evidence for your questions. That means being clear about what it reads, what it stores, and what you can delete.
What we read
TabMate is built around the page you are working in. It captures page context for the product workflows you use and does not passively scan background tabs or browsing history.
What we store
Your notes, excerpts, summaries, conversations, prompts, memories, and related workspace content are stored in your account so work can continue across sessions. Requests that generate responses are also sent through an LLM API provider.
What you control
You can delete individual notes, clear workspace content, or delete your account at any time from the account settings. Captured text lives in your workspace, not in a shared pool.