A classroom website kids actually enjoy
Gamified classroom jobs, educational challenges, star-of-the-week spotlights, and a supply list parents can check off in real-time.
Start Free Browse all site types →What this classroom site does
Start from the type of site you actually need, then turn on the pieces that fit the way your classroom works.
Give people one clear place to understand the classroom, find the next event or resource, and take the next useful step.
Use the modules that make sense for students: calendars, files, messages, tasks, resources, updates, RSVPs, or shared records.
The first questions should fit this site type, so a classroom is not pushed through a generic form built for a totally different use.
Build the first version around the real work
Start with the learning rhythm. Parents, students, teachers, and co-op leaders need to see schedules, assignments, resources, and expectations without digging through several apps. The site should make the next class, next task, and next update easy to understand.
Set up first
- Start with the class calendar, supply list, jobs, parent updates, and the first learning-resource collection.
- Separate student-facing activities from parent-only notes.
- Use simple labels so students can find the next task quickly.
- Add a weekly update habit before adding extra games or portfolio pieces.
What the page needs to prove
A first-time visitor should understand the learning model, who participates, what gets shared, and where the next assignment, meeting, class, or resource will appear. That makes the site useful for people and easier for crawlers to categorize without confusing it with a generic school page.
- Parent observer expectations
- Supply and assignment clarity
- Classroom job examples
- Private student data boundaries
Free should support the first real class, family, or co-op workflow. Paid upgrades fit later when the site needs more storage, a public domain, additional admin control, or larger shared-resource libraries.
Before you share the site, read it like a new visitor would. The public page should explain who this classroom is for, what someone can do next, and why the selected tools fit the situation. The private side should already have a useful starting place for students so the site does not feel like an empty shell after signup.
That first-pass clarity matters for conversion and search. People are more likely to keep going when the page matches their actual need, and crawlers get cleaner signals when the headings, examples, internal links, and calls to action all point to the same purpose. Start free, make the site useful, then upgrade only when the classroom needs more capacity or polish. The first version should feel complete enough that someone can understand it, join it, and come back to it.
Sound familiar?
These are the moments that usually mean a dedicated classroom site will help.
Kids hate the current tools
Google Classroom feels like homework. You need something kids actually want to open.
Parent communication gaps
Parents ask “what’s happening in class?” and you’re writing the same update five times.
Behavior tracking is manual
Sticker charts, clipboards, and spreadsheets. There has to be a better way.
Everything your classroom needs
One private website. No ads. No data mining. You own your data.
Classroom Jobs
Line leader, paper collector, board eraser. Rotate weekly with points.
Classroom Economy
Students earn points for jobs and behavior. Spend on privileges like extra recess.
Class Calendar
Assignments, field trips, parent conferences. Parents see it too.
Student Spotlights
Star of the week, achievement posts, class news. Build community.
Lesson Plans
Science experiments, art projects, reading lists. All with materials lists.
Supply List
Parents check off items in real-time. No more “did you bring your glue sticks?”
Up and running in minutes
No credit card. No setup fees. No catch.
Pick your type
30 seconds. Tell us your classroom name.
Add your people
Invite students with a link or email.
Start using it
Calendar, tasks, feed, vault — all ready.
Simple pricing
Because teachers spend enough of their own money.
Free for Teachers
- Unlimited students
- Classroom jobs with points
- Classroom economy system
- Class calendar
- Student spotlight feed
- Lesson plan library
- Supply list tracking
- Parent observer access
- Educational games
- 500 MB storage
Questions?
Is this free for teachers?
Yes. Individual teachers get a free classroom site. School-wide pricing is available for districts.
Can parents see what’s happening?
Parents get read-only observer access. They see the feed, calendar, and supply list without messaging you.
Is student data safe?
Your classroom site is fully private. Only invited members can see it. We never sell or share student data.
Does it work on tablets?
Mobile-first design. Works great on classroom iPads and student devices.
