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How can I use Up Learn as a teacher?
How can I use Up Learn as a teacher?

You can use your school’s Up Learn account to track your students’ engagement in real time!

Max Tavinor avatar
Written by Max Tavinor
Updated over a week ago

What can I do as a teacher?

Our courses were designed by teachers to help your students to consolidate their knowledge and complement your teaching. Whether you're leading your students through our learning videos, interactive quizzes or mock exam papers yourself, or letting them work independently, you'll be able to track their engagement through your teacher dashboard!

What can I track on my dashboard?

Student engagement can be tracked via your teacher dashboard, which provides real time updates for:

  • Last active time

  • Total XP

  • Weekly and total productive hours spent on the platform

  • Number of exam papers completed

Our filter feature gives you the power to choose what data you want to see. You can track the engagement of individual students, departments or entire year groups. Then, CSV and Excel downloads allow you to easily download this data, ensuring you’re only downloading the data you need.

How do I use Up Learn?

Whilst we started out as an independent learning platform, we’ve developed teacher dashboards so teachers, such as yourself, can see how your students are engaging with the tasks you set.

Here are a few ways to set work for students:

  • Non-prescriptive independent learning: set a mandatory number of hours for students to cover nonspecific material, and use the dashboard to track their engagement. We recommend encouraging students to complete three hours per week, so that they can complete the course in time for their exams

  • Prescriptive independent learning: set specific mandatory material for students, asking them to complete certain sections, before checking their course overviews to ensure they’ve completed it. This model works best when thinking about homework

  • Flipped learning: set them work before a class, then test their learning with a class test or discussion on what’s been covered.

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