Google Fine-Tunes Education Offerings

Google has introduced a number of changes to its education offerings, including updates to Classroom, Google Docs, its virtual reality offerings and teacher training.

In Classroom, Google's free web service for allowing teachers and students to communicate online and share assignments, developers have added a "Classwork page," to serve as the hub of class conversation, and refined the Settings and People pages. Teachers can modify grade point values when creating or editing assignments or questions. Grading features from the newly launched Course Kit, such as a customizable comment bank and the ability to toggle between files and student submissions while grading, have been pulled over into Classroom as well.

The company has also paid a little attention to Google Docs, which has given teachers and students difficulties as they try to format a document. The updates focus on better margin and indentation functionality, which comes in handy when creating MLA-style citations. Currently, writers can choose hanging indents and set specific indentations using a dialog box. However, in the fall, Google said it would allow for customizable header and footer margins and a vertical ruler.

new indentation options in Google Docs

Tour Creator, a free tool from Google for building virtual 360-degree tours on the computer using photos, image overlays and points of interest, now also allows for the addition of photos taken on the student's device using Cardboard Camera. The latter is an app for Android and iOS that works with Google's cheapie VR headset, Google Cardboard, enabling the user to turn his or her phone into a virtual reality camera to capture what Google calls "VR photos," dual images with slight shifts between each to give them a 3D quality.

Finally, Google said it had boosted the number of educator-made training videos in its Teacher Center, intended to help the community get started with G Suite for Education.

For more information, read the Google Education blog.

About the Author

Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.

Featured

  • white clouds in the sky overlaid with glowing network nodes, circuits, and AI symbols

    AWS, Microsoft, Google, Others Make DeepSeek-R1 AI Model Available on Their Platforms

    Leading cloud service providers are now making the open source DeepSeek-R1 reasoning model available on their platforms, including Amazon, Microsoft, and Google.

  • illustration with geometric shapes, digital circuitry, and subtle icons of an open book, graduation cap, and lightbulb

    University of Michigan Launches Agentic AI Virtual Teaching Assistant

    At the University of Michigan's Stephen M. Ross School of Business, a new Virtual Teaching Assistant pilot program is utilizing agentic AI to provide students with 24/7 access to support and self-directed learning.

  • robot waving

    Copilot Updates Aim to Make AI More Personal

    Microsoft has unveiled a range of updates to its Copilot platform, marking a new phase in its effort to deliver what it calls a "true AI companion" that adapts to individual users' needs, preferences and routines.

  • modern college building with circuit and brain motifs

    Anthropic Launches Claude for Education

    Anthropic has announced a version of its Claude AI assistant tailored for higher education institutions. Claude for Education "gives academic institutions secure, reliable AI access for their entire community," the company said, to enable colleges and universities to develop and implement AI-enabled approaches across teaching, learning, and administration.