Submit any timed module — results arrive within 4 seconds.
What your score is actually telling you
Most assessments hand you a number and leave you there. This program breaks down every result into 4 distinct categories so you can see where knowledge is solid and where it needs attention.
Scores by layer, not just total
The platform splits every assessment into foundational, intermediate, and applied tiers. A score of 71% overall might mask a 91% foundational rate alongside a 48% applied rate — and that distinction matters for what you do next.
Participants who reviewed their category breakdown at least once showed a 19-point average gain on the same topic in a second attempt, compared to 7 points for those who only saw the total.
Score tier reference
| Category | Score range | Status |
|---|---|---|
| Foundational | 85 – 100% | Solid |
| Intermediate | 65 – 84% | Review |
| Applied | 40 – 64% | Focus here |
| Applied | Below 40% | Restart module |
Three tiers show you exactly which layer needs attention.
Missed questions link directly to topic explanations.
The system suggests up to 5 relevant reviews by priority.
Questions about results
4 common questions from participants across Canada-
How quickly do results appear after finishing a quiz?
Results are calculated and displayed within 4 seconds of submission. The breakdown includes category scores, time spent per question, and a comparison against the average for that assessment. -
Can participants access their analysis reports later?
Yes. Every report is saved to the participant's profile for up to 18 months. You can revisit any past assessment and compare it against later attempts to track change over time. -
What does the difficulty breakdown actually show?
Each result is tagged with a difficulty tier — foundational, intermediate, or applied. The breakdown shows your accuracy rate within each tier so you can see where gaps actually exist, not just what the overall number suggests. -
Are results shared with instructors or administrators?
Participants control their own data. Instructors see aggregate group performance only — individual scores are visible to the participant alone unless they choose to share them explicitly.