Your first win

You don't need groups or students set up to get something real out of TeachersFlow. Each path below ends with something you can actually use in class — in minutes.

Generate something for tomorrow's class

  1. Go to Assessment generator and pick a structured task — an Exit ticket or Quiz works well as a first try.
  2. Describe the topic and class in a sentence or two — specific context is most of the quality difference ("B1 English, past simple vs. present perfect, 10 minutes, no multiple choice").
  3. Generate, then refine in the chat until it's right.
  4. The result opens in the materials editor — save it to your library, polish it, then download and print it.

That's a real, usable handout from a blank page in a few minutes. The form-by-form overview is in Assessment form types.

Or plan a lesson

Go to the Lesson planner, pick subject and age range, describe the topic, and generate objectives, then the full plan. Edit it in the editor, save it, download it as DOCX or PDF.

Or create a material from scratch

Open Teaching materials and build a handout in the Document editor or a worksheet, flashcards, or slides in the Canvas editor — with images from upload, stock search, or AI generation.

Also worth trying early

Photograph a real test and let the Test grader grade it question by question — you review and edit everything, and you can download the result as a PDF without any other setup.

When you're ready for the real thing

Everything above works standalone, but TeachersFlow pays off most when the pieces connect — results saving to students, goals aligning every tool, generations building on history. Create your first group in Groups, then read How TeachersFlow fits together — five minutes that explains how the pieces become one workflow.