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Could a public ranking site become a safe classroom feedback tool?

I'm testing a direction for Rankiwiki, a public community ranking site: https://rankiwiki.com/

The product today is not a classroom tool. It does not have private classroom spaces, teacher controls, student-data safeguards, moderation workflows, or compliance work behind it. So I am not trying to pitch it as ready for schools.

The question I am trying to validate is narrower: can ranking mechanics be useful for classroom feedback if the thing being ranked is not a student?

Unsafe examples are obvious and should be off-limits: ranking students by popularity, appearance, ability, behavior, background, or any personal trait.

Safer candidates might be:

  • book choices for a reading group
  • project ideas
  • anonymous exit-ticket answers
  • debate arguments
  • activity options
  • examples of clear explanations

I can see two possible modes:

  1. ranked results, to show class consensus
  2. random selection, to reduce popularity pressure and give quieter ideas a chance

For founders or edtech folks here: is this a real product direction, or does the safety/moderation burden make it a bad fit from the start?

The feedback I'm looking for is practical:

  • what would be the safest first use case?
  • what should be explicitly forbidden in the product?
  • would ranked results, random selection, or both be more useful?
  • what safeguards would need to exist before a teacher could use it?
on June 26, 2026
  1. 1

    The framing shift stood out to me more than the feature itself.

    Changing the question from "how do we rank students safely?" to "what's safe to rank in the first place?" feels like a much stronger starting point because it reduces the problem instead of trying to manage it.

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