The job: a ready-to-assign worksheet, not a text dump
Monday, 2:45 p.m., Grade 6 maths just wrapped on fraction equivalence and you need ten minutes to prep homework. The worksheet has a clear job: reinforce the exact skill taught, use familiar vocabulary, and include a checkable answer key. A solid mix would be two quick retrieval items (define, match), three practice problems at the taught difficulty, one word problem that uses class language, two short responses (explain a step; justify a choice), and one extension for fast finishers. Cap total reading to ~180–250 words for middle grades; less for Year 3–4.
A weak workflow asks for “a worksheet on fractions” and accepts whatever comes back. A stronger one directs the generator to keep stems short, ban trick distractors, and align to the method you modelled (e.g., number lines, not cross-multiplying). If today’s class was bilingual, ask for English/Arabic side-by-side so you are reviewing one document, not managing two versions. To see how this feels in practice, open the homework generator and draft from your lesson summary text inside the in-app demo.