Kiddom’s overnight analysis tool

- Kiddom rolled out an Atlas tool that auto-analyzes student Cool-Down responses overnight and prepares differentiated next steps. - The feature reportedly personalizes follow-up for 28+ students, saving teachers hours on planning. - The automation targets routine planning work, potentially freeing teacher time for instruction and relationship-building if privacy and accuracy checks are met (x.com/kiddomapp/status/2046983929354137724).

Kiddom has launched Atlas, an artificial intelligence tool that reviews student work overnight and lines up the next day’s math instruction inside its curriculum platform. (kiddom.co) The company announced Atlas on February 23, 2026, saying the system analyzes formative assessments in Kiddom’s Illustrative Mathematics curriculum and generates ready-to-teach warm-ups before class starts the next day. (businesswire.com) In practice, Kiddom says Atlas uses each day’s student responses to spot misconceptions and learning gaps, then recommends small-group instruction, grouping, and follow-up materials tied to the next lesson. (kiddom.co) Formative assessment is the quick check teachers use to see what students understood before moving on. Atlas is aimed at that step, where teachers usually sort through dozens of responses by hand and decide who needs reteaching, who is ready to move ahead, and what to do first the next morning. (thejournal.com) Kiddom is pitching Atlas as a layer on top of high-quality instructional materials rather than a separate chatbot or planning app. The company said the tool keeps “professional judgment at the center” and does not replace the teacher’s decision on what to teach. (kiddom.co) That matters in curriculum software because schools have spent the past several years trying to connect lesson materials, student work, and intervention tools that often live in separate systems. Kiddom said Atlas was built so insights and next steps stay inside the same curriculum workflow teachers already use. (kiddom.co) The company said early in-school results showed students using Atlas posted gains of up to 18% compared with peers, though the public materials released with the launch did not include a full methodology or independent evaluation. (financialcontent.com) Kiddom also said Atlas runs “within a closed environment” and is designed for repetitive planning work such as pattern analysis and assessment planning. Those claims land in a school market where student records are covered by federal privacy rules under the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act, or FERPA. (kiddom.co; studentprivacy.ed.gov) Kiddom’s public privacy disclosures say the company collects personal data including names and education records, and its website points schools to separate platform privacy terms for users inside the product. (kiddom.co) Kiddom was founded in 2015, and Atlas extends a platform that already combined digital curriculum, lesson planning, reporting, and artificial intelligence features for teachers. The next test is whether districts adopt the overnight workflow at scale and whether teachers trust the recommendations enough to use them in class the next morning. (kiddom.co; kiddom.co)

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