Five things that make teaching harder than it should be: prep, engagement, direct instruction, marking, and knowing who's actually stuck. Here's exactly how Axis handles each one inside a single living world โ no extra login, no extra subscription.
Teachers lose 7 to 12 hours a week hunting for or making materials, often paying for another subscription just to do it faster. Describe the lesson in one line โ the topic, the outcome, the grade โ and Axis generates the whole thing: a briefing, an interactive demo, and a graded checkpoint, aligned to what you actually need to cover.

A quiz with a leaderboard buys five minutes of attention. A Playground buys the whole lesson: students drag the mass, crank the gravity, mix the reactants, and a real 3D simulation answers back. Nothing is a canned animation. Everything responds โ which is exactly why it holds attention long after the novelty of "it's an app" wears off.

You still need to teach definitions, diagrams and worked examples โ that part of the job hasn't changed. A Briefing delivers that same theory as beats along a path your class travels together, with each concept anchored to the exact part of the world it describes, so the word and the picture arrive together instead of on separate slides.

Homework and knowledge checks live inside the same world as the lesson. Students answer by doing โ balancing the equation, driving the reaction โ not by guessing against a timer, and every attempt is auto-graded and mastery-scored the instant it's solved. No join code, no separate quiz app, no marking pile waiting on Sunday.

While the class plays, Plots watches. It doesn't just flag that three students are behind โ it names the actual misconception: a force drawn the wrong way, kilograms used for weight โ so you know exactly what to reteach and to whom. Live, during the lesson, not next week when the test comes back.
Born from Codeezy programmes and proven with 1,000+ students before a word of this page was written.
Start with whichever hurts most this term. Every world already includes all five: generate one lesson and you get the Briefing, Playground, Checkpoint and Plots entry together. There's nothing extra to switch on.
Features explains what each part does. This page is about which problem it solves for you specifically, so you find your problem first and meet the mechanism after, rather than the other way round.
For most schools, several of them at once. If your current stack is a slide tool, a quiz app, a polling tool and separate AI slide prep, Axis does all four inside one world and one login.
Every one of the five problems above shows up regardless of subject โ only the world around it changes.
Open a live Axis lesson and work through the same problem your students would โ prep, play, and get marked โ then picture it with your own class.