Google set to update Meet, Classroom and a host of education tools
New Chromebooks too tweaked for students
Google has announced a clutch of updates that it says are intended to advance education, both online and offline, in the classroom and also in remote learning environments.
The updates are, among others, for, Google Classroom, Google Meet and the next generation of G Suite for Education, now renamed as Google Workspace for Education.
In all, it has unveiled more than 50 new software tools aimed at remote learning.
Google Workspace for Education now has four editions: Google Workspace for Education Fundamentals, Google Workspace for Education Standard, Teaching and Learning Upgrade and Google Workspace for Education Plus.
Education Fundamentals and Education Plus are already available, while the Education Standard and the Teaching and Learning Upgrade versions will be unveiled in April.
According to Google, 170 million students and educators are using Google Workspace for Education worldwide to create, collaborate and communicate.
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Google Classroom gets upgrade
Google Classroom is set for a major tweak, including add-ons that allow students to download and use various third-party ed-tech tools. The add-ons feature will be made available later this year for Education Plus or Teaching and Learning Upgrade users only.
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Google Classroom, it may be recalled, is a service that lets teachers to create, distribute and evaluate assignments for students. Teachers can create online classroom area from where they can manage all of the documents their students need. The documents are stored in Google Drive and can be edited using Google tools.
Teachers will also get more tools for tracking student engagement so they can see who is progressing and who is falling behind, Google said.
The Google Classroom app will be updated to enable students with slow or intermittent internet connections to work offline, review assignments, open files and write assignments in Google Docs, even when they’re not connected to the web.
More control for teachers on Google Meet
Google Meet is another tool with Google Workspace for Education that enables teachers and their students to interact face-to-face over a video call.
Google says that its main priorities in terms of education is to make sure that online meetings are safe and secure and that students can stay engaged, and to that end Google Meet is gaining several new features.
Teachers will soon have the option to end meetings for everyone on the call, preventing students from staying on after the teacher has left — including in breakout rooms.
Google is also rolling out over the next few weeks the “mute all” option to help teachers keep class on track. And soon enough, teachers will also be able to control when students can unmute themselves.
In the coming months, educators using tablets or mobile phones to teach will also have access to key moderation controls, like who can join their meetings or use the chat or share their screen, directly from their iOS or Android devices.
New education features on Google Chromebooks
Amidst all this, Google will also launch more than 40 new Chromebook devices, including a number of convertible models that can function as both a laptop and a tablet device, with a stylus, touchscreen and dual-cameras. This is to help students take notes, edit videos, draw and record screencasts as they learn.
The new Chromebooks will also have more accessibility features for students with disabilities, including a new screen reader tool called ChromeVox.
Google has also come up with data storage policy changes for its education customers. "The new storage model will provide schools and universities with a baseline of 100TB of pooled cloud storage shared across all of your users — more than enough storage for over 100 million docs, 8 million presentations or 400,000 hours of video. This policy will go into effect across all Google Workspace for Education editions for existing customers in July 2022 and will be effective for new customers signing up in 2022, Google said.
Via: Google
Over three decades as a journalist covering current affairs, politics, sports and now technology. Former Editor of News Today, writer of humour columns across publications and a hardcore cricket and cinema enthusiast. He writes about technology trends and suggest movies and shows to watch on OTT platforms.