Visual Thinking
AI Graphic Organizer Generator
Create the right graphic organizer for any lesson — Venn diagrams, concept maps, T-charts, story maps, cause-and-effect frames and more — prefilled with prompts and ready to print, in seconds.
Make a graphic organizer freeMake thinking visible
A graphic organizer takes the invisible work of thinking — comparing, sequencing, sorting cause from effect — and gives it a shape on the page. For students who get lost in a blank page or a wall of text, that structure is the difference between staring and starting. The catch is that the right organizer depends on the thinking you want: a Venn diagram for comparison, a flowchart for process, a web for brainstorming. This tool builds the organizer that matches your task, prefilled with guiding prompts, ready to print.
Describe the task
Tell it the topic and what you want students to do — compare two characters, map a process, brainstorm causes.
Get the matching organizer
It picks and builds the organizer that fits — with labeled sections and guiding prompts already filled in to point students’ thinking.
Print and fill in
Tweak the labels or prompts, then print copies for students to complete, or project it to fill in together as a class.
Choosing the right organizer for the thinking
Graphic organizers, answered
Is the graphic organizer generator free?
Yes — make graphic organizers free with Education Copilot. It’s part of the same toolkit as the worksheet, writing prompt and differentiation tools, so scaffolding any lesson stays in one place.
What types of organizers can it make?
Venn diagrams and T-charts, concept maps and webs, cause-and-effect charts, sequence and flow charts, KWL charts, main-idea-and-details, story maps, and Frayer models for vocabulary — plus you can describe a custom layout you have in mind.
Are the organizers prefilled or blank?
They come with the sections labeled and guiding prompts filled in to direct students’ thinking, while leaving the spaces for students to complete. You can adjust or clear the prompts — keep them for support, remove them for a challenge.
Can students fill them in digitally?
You can print them for hands-on completion or project them to fill in together as a class, and the text-based organizers work well pasted into a document students type into. Print remains the quickest path for most classrooms.
Give every student a place to start
Generate the right graphic organizer for any topic — prefilled with prompts and ready to print — in seconds. Free to start.
Make a graphic organizer