Classroom is a free service for schools, non-profits, and anyone with a personal Google account. Classroom makes it easy for learners and instructors to connect—inside and outside of schools. Classroom saves time and paper, and makes it easy to create classes, distribute assignments, communicate, and stay organized.
Classroom is designed to help teachers create, collect, and grade assignments paperlessly, including time-saving features like the ability to automatically make a copy of a Google Document for each student. It also creates Drive folders for each assignment and for each student to help keep everyone organized.
Students can keep track of what’s due on the Assignments page and begin working with just a click. Teachers can quickly see who has or hasn't completed the work, and provide direct, real-time feedback and grades right in Classroom.
With the mobile app for iOS, students and teachers can view their classes and communicate with their classmates in real time. Students can open their assignments and work on them right from their iPhone or iPad. Teachers can keep track of who has turned in work and grade the assignment - at school or on the go. Students and teachers receive notifications when they have new content in Classroom, so they are always up to date.
There are many benefits of using Classroom:
Easy to set up
Teachers can add students directly or share a code with their class to join. It takes just minutes to set up.
Saves time
The simple, paperless assignment workflow allows teachers to create, review, and grade assignments quickly, all in one place.
Improves organization
Students can see all of their assignments on an assignments page, and all class materials (e.g., documents, photos, and videos) are automatically filed into folders in Google Drive.
Enhances communication
Classroom allows teachers to send announcements and start class discussions instantly. Students can share resources with each other or provide answers to questions on the stream.
Secure
Like the rest of Google Workspace for Education services, Classroom contains no ads, never uses your content or student data for advertising purposes.
Permissions Notice:
Camera: Needed to allow the user to take photos or videos and post them to Classroom.
Microphone: Needed to enable audio capture for recording videos to be posted to Classroom.
Photos: Needed to allow the user to attach photos or videos to Classroom. Photos or videos posted to Classroom will be stored on Google servers in order to show them in Classroom.
Let’s start positively. Google classroom as a service is genius. It allows you to have a single organized and streamlined way to turn in assignments. It is really convenient to use when the app works. That said, the app on iOS and iPadOS in particular has some horrible bugs that I have lost work over. First off, the PDF editor built into this app is terrible. It works sometimes. Using it with the Apple Pencil to do work really should be better than it is. It also has no auto save, which may not seem like a big deal, but when you look at the way iOS handles RAM management, it is a big issue. Let’s say you have your textbook on one app in a web browser and your homework in Google Classroom. You swipe over to the textbook in your browser. iOS, because iPads have very little ram, will kill Google Classroom to launch the browser. And because the PDF editor has no auto save feature, all of the work you just did is now gone and cannot be recovered. Second massive issue is the integration with Google services. When you go to the Google Docs app to edit a document that is in an assignment, sometimes the document saves, but the old version of the document is still in the classroom assignment. If you hit turn in, your teacher will not see anything that you added. Other times it does sync if you refresh the Google classroom page before turning in. But I have found that even though images are visible to me, sometimes they are not to my teacher. This app certainly is not without its issues, and it is honestly infuriating to use.
A serious review
randomperson.net
IK a lot of students seem to hate on this app unnecessarily (me includes), but there are some big flaws that need to be addressed. First of all, the lag. Sometimes the pages won’t load or the entire app will just shut down in my face, which prevents me from turning in work. Another thing is that when attaching files sometimes as links or straight from google drive, it won’t let you. It’ll say error and you’ll have to try creating a copy of the doc and see if that works, and if it doesn’t...whoopy-doo try again tmwr. My theory for this is that you can’t submit files that belong to someone else, even if you have editing permission. And that the app/site will occasionally just have a conniption. This is really annoying when you have group projects. Also the organization of classes on the home page leaves much to be desired. Not all of my teachers archive their classes, so it ends up cluttering my feed and I’m scrolling up and down for 5 minutes trying to find a class between the endless swamps of gray. I wish I could pick the order for them or maybe have class folders (?), where I can group similar classes together without completely hiding them away. But yeah, those are the main grievances I can recall right now since I’m in my summer days.Although this app was by no means perfect, I fear the the switch to canva in my district will be even worse. I genuinely can’t imagine that it’d turn out well.
Students hate homework, so they rate the app low, but it’s actually well-made.
dominion.justifies
The layout is easy to navigate, I have not experienced issues with performance on the platform in the past four weeks I have been using it as a student, and it’s a very convenient tool for both teachers and students. This app is only rated low because students either dislike doing classwork on a computer in general, or they do not like being assigned homework over the weekend or when they are otherwise not in school. This isn’t a good reason to rate the app low, but they will either 1. outright state they dislike school/schoolwork, or 2. write a fake review claiming it is terrible. I think this is further proven by the fact that all of the other Google apps, to my knowledge, are said to be well-made and have stellar reviews. This app absolutely does not deserve the two stars it currently has at the time of this review. I typically do not even write reviews, but I think it’s so ridiculous that this app is THIS poorly rated simply because students dislike schoolwork, so I felt compelled to write this review.TL;DR: I think this is a great app as are the other Google apps, it’s very convenient for me as a student in high-school. Students have bombed this app with negative reviews simply because they do not like schoolwork.
It’s mid I guess…
AnonymousMCACEC
As an 8th grade student myself, google classroom is a good way to assign homework and assignments. But it’s not really fun in a way, we are forced to carry chromebooks to school everyday so you can hop on google classroom and do work after work. It’s really repetitive, boring, and frankly quite annoying to stare at a screen and type as you slowly watch the due date come. It’s just boring, repetitive and annoying at times. Despite all of that though, its usage is quite easy and it works well for homework and assignment related tasks, it’s not google classroom itself, it’s just that teachers rely too heavily on google classroom to teach instead of finding more fun and engaging ways to keep students interested in the subject.Google classroom shouldn’t be abused in that regard, but it works at least. If we find ways to come up with something more interesting for people my age, hearing school or google classroom wouldn’t sound so bad, if we make it seem more like a game instead of a punishment, life would be a lottt easier and more enjoyable. Learning games like Blooket and Gimkit are really fun learning games that teach you subjects, you can also make it homework as well and it’s a lot more enjoyable than google classroom due to its gamification. Google classroom is just too basic and simple to be considered good for classroom use considering the majority of students are under the age of 18, simply, kids don’t find such things interesting, thus the decrease in engagement in class. So while Google classroom is simple and works well, it is also not the best thing out there for teaching purposes.
* Bug fixes and performance improvements
Version 3.55.300047300
The developer, Google, indicated that the app’s privacy practices may include handling of data as described below. For more information, see the developer’s privacy policy .
Data Linked to You
The following data may be collected and linked to your identity:
Location
Contact Info
Contacts
User Content
Search History
Identifiers
Usage Data
Diagnostics
Other Data
Data Not Linked to You
The following data may be collected but it is not linked to your identity:
Diagnostics
Privacy practices may vary, for example, based on the features you use or your age. Learn More
Accessibility
The developer has not yet indicated which accessibility features this app supports. Learn More