Class-level performance reports

Create assessment performance reports for your entire class at the click of a button.

Last updated 3 months ago

Early feature ☝🏼

This feature is an early release. Please share your ideas and feedback with us.

This report analyzes feedback from multiple students in a single course and identifies patterns, trends, and opportunities for course improvement.

Instead of reviewing each student's feedback individually, you’ll receive a comprehensive analysis that reveals common learning challenges across the entire course, systemic teaching gaps that may need addressing, what's working well in your instruction, blind spots where students don't recognize their own deficiencies, and prioritized recommendations for immediate classroom interventions.

Generate a report

To request a report, go to a Course page and click the Download button in the Reports columns of the assessments you’d like to create a report for. Select Performance summary and click Download report. Your report will be generated and downloaded automatically.

What the report contains

  1. Summary Section: The report begins with a concise 2-3 paragraph overview highlighting the most critical findings and their implications for your teaching.

  2. Class Performance Overview: This section provides a quantitative breakdown showing how the entire class performed across different rubric criteria, using specific numbers such as "8 out of 12 students scored 'Developing' on Critical Analysis."

  3. Key Findings: The analysis is organized into five dimensions:

    1. Clarity of Instructions examines whether students understood assignment requirements;

    2. Common Misconceptions identifies recurring misunderstandings about concepts;

    3. Mutual Strengths highlights areas where the class excels;

    4. Shortcomings & Learning Gaps reveals where students consistently struggle; and

    5. Blindspots uncovers gaps students don't recognize in their own work.

  4. Actionable Recommendations: The final section provides Focus Areas listing the 3-5 most critical issues ranked by urgency and impact, followed by What You Could Try, which offers specific in-person classroom interventions you can implement immediately.