For the arts
For the arts: the yearbook, the newspaper, the band, and the stage.
Homeroom is built by people who ran these programs. The same desktop-class book builder your yearbook staff designs in, a real newsroom where a story moves from a pitch to a reader, a curriculum that teaches on the exact screen a student is working, and fast public online editions anyone can read — one login and one student list for every arts class in the building.
This page names only what is shipped today, and labels anything still coming as early access — never as done.
What every arts class gets
A desktop-class book builder
The same editor your yearbook staff lays out in — real layers, version history, undo and redo, and type controls — runs in the browser with nothing to install. A drama program builds a season program in it; a literary-magazine staff builds an issue. See the platform Shipped
A real newsroom, pitch to reader
A story moves from a pitch, to an assignment, to a draft, through a section editor, to the editor-in-chief, and only then to the reader — an approval chain you can rename but never remove. The discipline a college paper runs on, sized for a high-school staff. How the newsroom works Shipped
A curriculum that teaches on the page
Thirty-four lessons appear on the exact screen a student is working — the editor, the photo screen, the caption box, the newsroom board — each explaining the craft behind the click, with a standards alignment report an administrator can check. See the curriculum Shipped
Public online editions
Every publication gets a fast, public online edition with no trackers — the reader-facing twin of the printed book, for stories that cannot wait for a printer. See a live edition Shipped
By program
Yearbook classes
The desktop-class builder, the class roster, and the picture-day pipeline are one system on one student list. The staff designs the book while the software teaches the craft on the page. Shipped
Journalism & the newsroom
The pitch-to-publish workflow and public online editions turn a class into a working newsroom — every story approved through a real chain, every issue readable the day it ships. The newsroom workflow Shipped
Band, music & ensembles
Marching band, concert portraits, and section groups get their own photography program — with facial recognition off unless a parent turns it on, and a photo offered for sale only when a family’s permission allows it. A music program can publish its own program book in the builder too. Band & music photography Shipped
Theatre & drama
A theatre program builds and publishes its own season program, playbill, or cast-and-crew page in the same builder, then shares it as a public online edition — the yearbook staff’s tools, pointed at the stage. Shipped
The curriculum keeps growing
The teach-as-you-build coach and its checkable alignment report are live today. The deeper part — the full multi-level journalism course, with units in reporting, interviewing, writing, ethics, and press law, and a year-long pacing plan for each level — is being authored and loaded onto the same engine. We name it as coming, never as available. See exactly what ships today. The deeper course is in early access
We’re honest about what’s shipped
The desktop-class book builder, the pitch-to-reader newsroom, the teach-as-you-build curriculum with 34 live lessons and a checkable alignment report, the band and music photography program, and public online editions are live today. The deeper multi-level journalism course is in early access — still being loaded, and pilled that way until it ships. That is the whole gift: every arts class in one system, and a straight answer about what it does now.