Start Managing your Time with Tutor LMS

Something great in LMS is knocking on your doors. Let’s explore the recent changes together.

What can be better than a clear visual information about your complicated schedule? Considering the importance of having a better time management tool, the development team decided to add a new section on your LMS dashboards.

The visualization of your schedule is what we have worked on during the past days. So in case you missed it, there is a new section on your dashboard called “Timetable”-all the answers to your “when?” questions are gathered on this tiny calendar.

This section is created not only to provide visual information but also to allow you to manage your time more easily by creating lessons or events right on the calendar by clicking on its cells. All you need to do is choosing the date and creating an event which may be a lesson or another event.

The good news is events are added automatically on the timetable when you create a new group with a new schedule.

Let’s go a little back on what we have already had. Creating a group is the first thing you need to do in order to start a great organizational journey in LMS.  For a better organization, the development team added what almost all teachers need; the option to choose between fixed or flexible schedules.

When creating a group you will have two options of setting the time. Choose between fixed time or a flexible schedule and set special hours for each day of your lessons. 

Keep on following LMS and organizing your lessons with LMS, because better innovative solutions to your time-consuming problems are yet to come.

By Mariam Danielyan January 5, 2026
What 2025 Taught Us About Building Digital Learning When we look back at 2025, what stands out most isn't a single feature launch or milestone. It's how much our understanding of digital learning changed by working closely with educators, managers, and learning teams. This year wasn't about building faster. It was about building more honestly, based on how teaching actually happens. What follows is a reflection on what we learned, what surprised us, and how those lessons are shaping the future of Tutor Platform. Why We're Looking Back at 2025 In education technology, there’s a constant push to move forward: new tools, new features, new promises. But meaningful progress requires pause; moments to reflect on what’s working, what isn’t, and why. For Tutor Platform , 2025 was a year where assumptions met reality. We didn’t just ship product updates. We worked side by side with educators as they tried to move their learning materials, assignments, and workflows into a digital environment. And through that process, we learned that digital learning isn’t primarily a technical challenge. It’s an operational one. Looking back at the year helps us make sense of that shift — and share what building with educators has taught us. Digital Learning Starts With Teachers, Not Tools Much of the conversation around digital learning focuses on learners: engagement, accessibility, and outcomes. These are all critical. But 2025 reinforced something fundamental for us: If a digital learning experience doesn’t work for teachers, it won’t work for learners either. Teachers are the ones preparing materials, updating content, reviewing assignments, and responding to questions. When their workflows are fragmented or overly complex, the learning experience downstream suffers — no matter how polished the platform looks. This insight directly builds on what we explored earlier in Designing E-Learning for Everyone. Inclusive and effective learning design isn’t just about who can access content — it’s about who can manage it without burning out. In 2025, we saw firsthand how much invisible work sits behind every lesson. And we realized that improving teacher experience isn’t a “nice to have.” It’s the foundation. Content Became the Biggest Bottleneck One of the biggest surprises this year was where most of the friction lived. It wasn’t in teaching itself. It wasn’t even about using new technology. It was in managing content. Most institutions we worked with already had good materials: books, PDFs, presentations, exercises, and notes built over the years. The challenge wasn’t quality — it was structure.
By Mariam Danielyan December 22, 2025
Behind the Scenes: From Books to Digital Learning In our previous blog, "Designing E-learning for Everyone," we explored what makes digital learning truly work - accessibility, clarity, flexibility, and thoughtful design for different types of learners. This article is the next chapter of that story. Over the past few months, we’ve been working closely with one of our clients - a school with a dedicated group of teachers to help them move from printed books and scattered PDFs to a single, structured digital learning environment using Tutor Platform. What follows is not a polished success story, but a real behind-the-scenes look at what it actually takes to digitalize learning materials in a way that supports teachers, students, and managers alike. The Starting Point: When Learning Materials Live Everywhere Before the transition, the school's learning content was spread across multiple formats and tools:
By Mariam Danielyan November 19, 2025
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