From generation to the classroom
Generated content is a starting point. The path from "the AI wrote something useful" to "my students are working with it" runs through Teaching materials — and it's shorter than most people expect.
Save straight into your library
Lesson plans and assessments open in the same editor teaching materials use. That means you can save them directly into your materials library — pick a title and folder, done. No copying between tools. From that moment it's a material like any other: editable, reusable, shareable.
Make it yours, make it visual
Inside the editors you can refine the content with AI, add images (upload, stock search, or AI-generated — all through the shared image library), add voice audio, and in the Canvas editor build worksheets, posters, flashcards, and multi-page presentations with animations.
Get it to students
A finished material can go out several ways:
- Print or download — PDF and DOCX export for the classic route.
- Share with a group — from the group's Share tab, as read-only or editable. Editable materials are genuinely collaborative: students open them through their portal link and work in the same document, no accounts needed.
- Present — Canvas materials work as slide decks with animations for teaching directly from the app.
Close the loop
When a material or assessment turns out genuinely good, feed it back: training documents in Personalization accept uploads and imports from your history, materials, and groups. Your best work becomes the standard the AI aims for next time. Details in Teach the AI to be you.
Keep the library livable
One top-level folder per class or subject, unit folders inside, shared folders only for student-facing content — the structure guidance is in Teaching materials. A library you can navigate in a year is worth the thirty seconds of filing now.