 Having difficulty reading can profoundly impact a person's life, especially that of children and young people. Innovations in technology have empowered students with learning challenges to grow their confidence in literacy. All Come Learn, a brand new AI-based technology, helps students to learn to read more effectively and efficiently, making literacy barriers easier to overcome for generations to come. The All Come Learn is the world's first learning body. You can capture entire pages of text at the click of a button, and that's both printed and digital text. The Reading Pal feature encourages the student to read to the device. The device is listening to them read, and straight away, once that student finishes that passage of text, we provide initial feedback straight away for the student. What we are also able to do from that is pull an analytical, more in-depth report, which can be sent to the tutor and it very much becomes a learning companion. The joy of a good book is something that many of us take for granted, but students who have difficulty reading miss out on that experience and can also really struggle to engage in the classroom. All Come says its learning device has been a game changer, using the latest technology to support students as they read to grow in both confidence and ability. A recent study carried out in a range of schools in England showed that 84% of students felt that using the All Come Learn helped them to better understand what they were reading. Reading connects us with... It connects us with ideas. It connects us with opportunities. It connects us with dreams from the future. What I see appear on the page in front of me is four corners of a laser frame. Now, the frame will pick up anything inside the four corners. You're happy with the position of the frame? Simply release the trigger button. Welcome to the Learning Evolution. Read with it, talk with it, learn with it. Whether that's using wide headphones or Bluetooth earphones, it allows the students to understand the context of the words on the page. Before you had All Come, how did you feel about reading? I felt it was quite hard and difficult. Austin is really enjoying his reading now that he has the All Come Learn to help him make sense of long words. He's using the All Come Reading Pal feature, which listens to him read, tells him how he did, then follows up with a report. Until she got to her point, then she stopped and barked. Proud of you. You succeeded reading 19 words in a row without a mistake. Excited to watch your reading grow. Teacher Natasha Bartlett discovered the All Come Learn at an educational technology conference. It's just helped the children to be able to access learning more independently without relying on an adult to help them. From my point of view, it's amazing because I can go around the whole class rather than just sitting with a group of children who can't read. It gives me that freedom to also be able to cater to everybody and to know that those children are still accessing the work and able to get on with it. Aidan Lane, diagnosed with oral dyspraxia, has found the All Come Learn a great help and is looking forward to using it in his GCSEs on its special exam setting. Amazing device. Yeah, it's given you a huge amount of independence. With flexible budgeting models to make it accessible to everyone, All Come is keen to portray this unique technology as the perfect support for students. One specific quote that I heard from a student once, which was, it's like having a teacher in my pocket. It is because a teacher is there to support you and support your learning adventure and that's exactly what the All Come learned us as well.