Faculty member
Baylor College of Medicine, United States
I need a faster way to turn complex material into visual sequences that can support lectures, review sessions, and student discussion.
Teachers, faculty, and education leaders in our applicant pool are using LlamaGen to prepare classroom visuals, explain complex ideas, and help students create with AI responsibly.
Schools represented
Representative schools and universities, shown with public school-domain icons where available.
New York UniversityUnited Statesnyu.eduDe-identified stories
The notes below are polished, de-identified teaching scenarios derived from role, institution, level, and country fields in the application data.
Baylor College of Medicine, United States
I need a faster way to turn complex material into visual sequences that can support lectures, review sessions, and student discussion.
Collège des Deux Canons, France
Visual stories help students enter a topic faster. The value is not decoration, it is giving the class a shared scene to talk about.
Schule Herisau, Switzerland
Teachers need tools that are quick enough for real planning days and flexible enough to adapt to different ages, languages, and lesson goals.
University of Dundee, United Kingdom
I want students to demonstrate understanding by composing visual explanations, not only by submitting another text-heavy document.
Use cases
Start a unit with a visual scene that frames the topic before students meet the full reading or lecture.
Break abstract ideas into panels, characters, and visual cause-and-effect sequences.
Let students demonstrate understanding by making comics, visual arguments, and story-based projects.
Adapt a topic into simpler visuals, bilingual dialogue, or scaffolded story formats for different learners.
If you teach a course, run a department pilot, or support professional development, the education plan helps your group test visual AI workflows before scaling them.

Questions & Answers
Yes. Applicants with non-academic emails can upload a verification document in the education plan form.
Yes. Teachers use LlamaGen for lesson preparation, live classroom prompts, project-based learning, and student visual storytelling.
No. The institution list reflects de-identified applicant affiliations and is not an endorsement or partnership claim.