CursivaDocs
Start here

Overview

Cursiva is a platform for building, publishing, selling, and tracking learning experiences. This page is the map of the documentation: it explains how the platform is organized and points you to every area.

What Cursiva is

Cursiva brings everything a teaching operation needs into one place: writing the material, defining how it's delivered, controlling who has access, charging when it makes sense, and observing what happens after enrollment.

Instead of splitting "course," "lesson," and "path" into separate products, the platform works with a single flexible unit — content — that can grow from a standalone lesson into a full library without duplicating the original material.

How the platform is organized

Content is the central unit. A piece of content brings together its identity, editorial body, access rules, format, and commercial setup. Publishing, enrollment, payment, community, and tracking all orbit around it.

The same piece of content can play different roles depending on context:

RoleHow it works
Standalone lessonA piece of content published on its own and consumed directly
Sellable offerA piece of content with a price, checkout, and access rules
Composed experienceA piece of content that references other content as modules

A reference connects one piece of content to another without copying it: the original material stays single and can appear across many paths, each with its own module title, address, and release schedule. That's how you start with a simple lesson and evolve into courses and paths while reusing the same material.

If this is your first time on the platform, follow this order:

  1. Getting started — set up your organization, create a short piece of content, and walk the learner's path.
  2. Concepts — understand content, references, access, and progress before you scale.
  3. Editor and blocks — write the material and add media, activities, and assessments.
  4. Publishing and access — review in the learner preview and put the version into circulation.
  5. Sales and payments — turn published content into an offer if you're going to charge for it.

Documentation areas

Quick map by goal

You want to...Go to
Publish something for the first timeGetting started
Understand the architecture before you scaleConcepts
Write and structure the materialEditor and Block reference
Control publishing and who has accessPublishing and access
Track learners and enrollmentsLearners and enrollments
Measure progress and issue certificatesProgress and certificates
Charge for a piece of contentPricing & checkout
Organize content ownersTeams
Analyze outcomesInsights
Adjust the organization and securityOrganization & security
Integrate via codeAPI Reference

Conventions in these docs

  • Content, Basics, Catalog, Access, Pricing, Settings, and similar names in code refer to areas and labels in the product interface itself.
  • Callout blocks highlight rules and things to watch for: neutral information appears as a note, confirmations as success, and risks as a warning.
  • Links in the /docs/... format point to other pages within this same documentation.

If this is your first time on the platform, start with Getting started. If you'd rather understand the model before you build, start with Concepts.