Loading...
Loading...
Stop Grading. Start Teaching.
Essays Instantly Graded with Your Rubrics. Assessments Autograde with No Answer Key or Multiple Choice.

Real Writing
No word prediction, grammar checks, or AI assistance.
Exit Tickets
Just post your questions. Get class data instantly.
Powerful tools designed by teachers, for teachers. No learning curve, just results.
Create custom rubrics once, let AI grade essays and journals forever. Get detailed feedback for each student in seconds, not hours.

Create assessments that AI grades instantly. No answer key or multiple-choice needed. Just real-time data.

Custom editor blocks copy-paste, word prediction, and spell check. See their true writing ability.

Blocks AI paste
Copy/paste disabled
No autocorrect
Tests real writing ability
Interactive blogs
Writing becomes shareable blogs
Autograded Assessments
Short answer questions graded instantly
Custom rubric grading
Essays autograde with your rubrics
Every essay transforms into an interactive blog with comments, likes, and engagement features

Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet is often dismissed as a simple love story, but beneath the romantic tragedy lies a powerful exploration of youth rebellion against societal constraints. The young lovers don't just defy their feuding families—they challenge an entire social system that prioritizes family honor over individual happiness. Their secret marriage, clandestine meetings, and ultimate sacrifice represent a direct rebellion against the adult world's expectations and the rigid social structures of Verona. In this light, Romeo and Juliet becomes less about star-crossed romance and more about the eternal conflict between youthful idealism and established authority. The play's portrayal of adults reveals Shakespeare's critique of generational power dynamics. The Capulets and Montagues are trapped in a cycle of inherited hatred they can no longer even explain, while figures like Friar Lawrence and the Nurse, despite their good intentions, ultimately fail the young protagonists. The adults in Romeo and Juliet are either actively harmful or ineffectively helpful, creating a world where youth must forge their own path. This pattern reflects the universal experience of young people who feel misunderstood by the older generation and must choose between conformity and authentic self-expression.
Join the teachers who've reclaimed their time while giving students better feedback than ever.
Turn essays into shareable blogs. Students comment, like, and engage with each other's work.

Twitter-style prompts for instant engagement. Students respond without seeing others' answers first.

Your control
Enable features per assignment