Imagine if your textbook could talk to you, quiz you, and even use your favorite hobbies as examples. Well, Google just tried that—and students remembered way more.

So here’s what Google did: they built a tool called Learn Your Way. You take any textbook chapter, upload it, and suddenly it’s not just a wall of text. The system rewrites it for your reading level, swaps in examples about whatever you’re into—sports, music, gaming, food—and then spits out mind maps, audio lessons, slides, and quizzes. All from the same chapter. It’s like your textbook just got a personal trainer.

They tested this with sixty high school students in Chicago. Half used the new tool, half just read the usual PDFs. Three days later, the students with the personalized AI remembered a lot more—11 percentage points higher, to be exact. Not only that, but they felt more confident and less stressed about tests. Every single student using Learn Your Way said they felt better about taking exams, while a chunk of the regular PDF group still felt uneasy.

Why does this matter? Because learning isn’t one-size-fits-all. If you’re cramming for exams or wrestling with tough material, having your textbook talk to you in your own language—literally and figuratively—can make all the difference. The research backs it up: mixing up how you learn (text, audio, visuals, quizzes) helps things actually stick. It’s still experimental, and you’ll need to upload your own PDFs, but you can try it for free with whatever you’re studying right now.

Read the research paper on arXiv or try Learn Your Way on Google Labs