I didn't originally build CramClub for teachers. I built it for students. But it turns out that when students start using a tool and loving it, their teachers want in too. Over the past couple of months, I've gotten a steady stream of emails from teachers asking: "Can I assign CramClub content to my class? Can I see how my students are doing?"
The answer is now yes.
What Teachers Get
Create classrooms. Set up a classroom with a name, subject, and grade level. You get a unique join code — share it with your students and they can join in seconds. No email invitations, no approval workflows, no friction.
Assign anything. You can assign any content on CramClub as homework: a literature study guide, a math track module, a language lesson, a practice test, or a quiz. Set a due date, and CramClub handles the rest. Students see their assignments in their dashboard and can track their own progress.
Track progress. The teacher dashboard shows you completion rates, scores, and progress for every assignment and every student. You can see who's on track, who's falling behind, and where your class is struggling. No more guessing whether students actually did the reading.
Gradebook. Scores from assignments flow into a gradebook view. You can see at a glance how each student is performing across all their assignments.
For Teachers, By Request
To keep classrooms focused, teacher accounts require a quick application. If you have a .edu email address, you're approved instantly. Everyone else gets reviewed within 24 hours. This isn't gatekeeping — it's making sure that classroom features are used by actual educators.
Once approved, you get a teacher badge on your profile and access to the full classroom toolkit. You can manage multiple classrooms, and there's no limit on the number of students you can invite.
What Students See
From the student side, joining a classroom is seamless. They enter the join code, and their dashboard now shows assignments from their teacher alongside their personal study goals. Completing an assignment earns the same XP and streak credit as any other studying — so there's no trade-off between doing homework and maintaining their personal progress.
What's Next
This is the first version of classrooms. I'm already working on announcements (so teachers can post messages to their class), more granular analytics, and the ability for teachers to create custom quizzes directly from the classroom view.
If you're a teacher, apply for a teacher account and try it out. I'd love your feedback on what's working and what's missing.
— Peter