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Your entire class's learning picture in one dynamic view with Class Atlas
Checking in on a class of 25 students means opening 25 profiles. Class Atlas changes that with one view that surfaces where your class is right now.

Jameel teaches 7th grade math. Before planning tomorrow's lesson, he opens 24 student profiles one at a time, scrolling through mastery data, trying to hold it all in his head. Who's still struggling with ratios? Who regressed on the last unit? Which students are ready to move on and which ones need him to go back?
By the time he's gotten through half the roster, he's forgotten what he saw at the top.
Every teacher knows the pain and restrictions of this type of workflow.
The question every teacher is actually trying to answer
When a teacher opens student data, they're not doing research. They're trying to answer two questions before the bell rings: where should I focus my instruction tomorrow, and which students need my attention right now?
Those two questions used to require opening 20, 25, 30 individual profiles, mentally aggregating what you found, and hoping you remembered accurately when it was time to plan. It was slow, it didn't scale, and the picture you assembled was already going stale by the time you were done building it.
Class Atlas answers both questions the moment you open it.
What you see when you open it
At the top of Class Atlas, Kira generates a summary of your class's current learning state. Not a raw data dump, but an actual narrative that surfaces what matters: which students are struggling, where the class is regressing, and which groups share the same gaps. Three actionable cards sit beneath it, each tied to a specific instructional move Kira recommends based on your class's data right now. Click any card and Kira opens a chat with that recommendation pre-loaded as context, ready to help you think through exactly what to do next.
Below the summary, distribution charts show how your students are spread across learning readiness zones and support tiers. Not a single number that flattens everything into a score, but a real picture of how the class is distributed and where the concentration of need lives.
And below that: Skills Needing Attention.
The skills that need your instruction, ranked
This is the part that replaces the 24-tab workflow.
Skills Needing Attention surfaces the skills where the most students are struggling, ranked by impact. Each card shows the skill, why it was flagged, and how many students need support. One click on any skill opens a side panel with the full picture: a breakdown of where students are on that skill, recommended next steps, and a list of every student who needs help with their mastery status and confidence level for that specific skill.
From there, you can drill into any student's individual profile or open a chat with Kira to get a specific instructional plan. You don't lose the class context when you go deep on a student. Kira keeps it.
For teachers who want to go further, the curriculum browser lets you explore any domain, standard, or skill with class-level aggregates at every level. The same side panel opens from any skill in the curriculum view. The whole page is one connected system, not a set of disconnected charts.
Built for how teachers actually work
Class Atlas doesn't compute new data. It aggregates what Kira already knows from every student's individual profile, surfaces the patterns, and puts them in one place. When a student submits an assignment, that data syncs automatically. When you need the freshest picture, you can refresh manually and see the timestamp so you always know how current what you're looking at is.
Admins see all classes across their organization. Teachers see their assigned classes. Switching between classes takes one click. The view is always ready when you open it.
Kira also flags signals worth paying attention to: regression spikes, low confidence gaps, and groups of students who share the same skill gaps across multiple areas. These aren't generic alerts. They're specific patterns in your class's data that would take a teacher an hour to surface on their own.
Teachers shouldn't have to do detective work before they can plan instruction. The data is already there, Kira just makes it visible in a way that's actually useful.
Class Atlas is live in Kira now. The moment you open it, you know where your class stands and what to do next.
Try it today
Class Atlas is live in Kira today. If you're already using Kira, log in to your account and start building directly with Action Tiles in lesson.
If you're a teacher who hasn't tried Kira yet, you can create a free account and explore the platform at your own pace.
If you're a district leader interested in bringing Kira to your schools, get in touch with our team and we'll walk you through what it looks like at scale.
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In this article
The question every teacher is actually trying to answer
What you see when you open it
The skills that need your instruction, ranked
Built for how teachers actually work
Try it today