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Decidr and Scentia launch agentic AI tools across student learning

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Decidr has launched a suite of agentic AI learning tools across leading education and training provider Scentia's brands, including the Australian Institute of Management (AIM), AIM Business School and the Australasian College of Health and Wellness.

Decidr and Scentia bring AI into student learning

Decidr has launched a new suite of AI learning tools, now in use across courses at major education group Scentia, the umbrella group for the Australian Institute of Management (AIM), AIM Business School and the Australasian College of Health and Wellness, the education brands that make up Scentia.

AIM alone trains more than 43,000 students and professionals a year.

The partnership comes as education providers face growing pressure to show how AI can be used constructively in learning, not just managed as a risk.

While much of the sector debate has focused on academic integrity, Scentia and Decidr are taking a practical approach: using AI in live learning environments to help students understand concepts, check whether assessments are on track and turn dense course content into shorter, more interactive learning.

“Many organisations are still trying to work out where AI fits. This partnership shows what happens when AI moves from experimentation into the customer experience,” said Craig Hodges, Chief Commercial Officer at Decidr.

“Scentia is using AI in the parts of the student journey where it can make a real difference: helping learners get clarity, build confidence and stay engaged. For Decidr, this is exactly the kind of enterprise AI we believe in: practical, embedded and tied to measurable outcomes.”

The suite of tools includes:

  • Course Tutor, an always-on academic assistant that answers student questions using enrolled course content, learning outcomes and assessment criteria.
  • AI Assessment Tutor, which gives students rubric-aligned feedback on draft submissions before final grading.
  • Micro-Learning Generation, which turns course material into shorter, interactive learning experiences such as quizzes, flashcards, revision modules and bite-sized lessons.

The tools sit inside the existing learning environment, rather than operate as standalone AI chatbots. Students can access course-specific support as they study, while educators gain visibility into common questions, engagement patterns and learning needs.

“We wanted a partner we could build with for the long term, not a vendor selling generic AI tools,” said Matt Stejer, Scentia Head of Product Technologies & AI.

“Decidr stayed focused on what mattered: practical AI features that support our students and fit into the way they already learn. These tools are not separate from the learning experience. They are part of it.”

For Decidr, the partnership is a major proof point for its enterprise AI model, showing how established organisations can move from AI pilots to deployed products that sit inside existing systems, workflows and user experiences.


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