For Teachers

Retention, made visible.

Attendance and grades don't tell you which concepts are silently slipping. Wivme runs a short daily recall loop alongside your class — and turns it into a dashboard you can read in a glance.

A teacher reviewing concept-level retention in the Wivme dashboard
A glance is enough.

Four pages, built for speed

No analytics maze. Each page answers one question you actually ask.

ClassHow is the class doing?

Retention health in one view — Strong vs Decaying vs Weak across every concept, plus a needs-attention list ranked by urgency.

StudentsWho needs me?

Every student, segmented by state. Click for concept-by-concept history.

ConceptsWhat do I re-teach?

Every concept, sorted by how many students are weak on it.

ReportsThe PTM, prepared.

A Parent Meeting PDF in one click — retention map, weekly trend, three concrete things to discuss.

The Class view of the Wivme teacher dashboard
The Class view — your whole class's memory health, one glance.

The Parent Meeting PDF

The hardest minute of a PTM is "how is my child doing?" This answers it with data, not vibes: one click generates a 2-page report — the student's concept retention map, their weekly trend, and three concrete discussion points. WhatsApp it to the parent before the meeting. You walk in prepared; so do they.

Getting started

  1. CredentialsYour school admin sends a login ID + temporary password.
  2. Log inThe dashboard runs in your browser — nothing to install.
  3. Pick your classesChoose subject + sections on first login; your real data loads.
  4. A weekly glanceMost value: the Reports run before PTMs and tests.

The boundaries

Deliberate design choices, so the loop stays honest and your load stays flat.

Not a replacement

Wivme is the retention layer. The teaching is yours.

Not graded

Recall checks never count toward marks — retention-as-grade kills honest recall.

Not extra homework

5–10 contained minutes a day, at home. We don't add load.

Privacy — RBACYou see your classes. Only yours.

Parents see only their child; students see only themselves; the school admin sees aggregates. Privacy policy →