At its Google I/O developer conference in Mountain View, California, today, Google is announcing a new tool for developers to use if they’d like their applications to integrate with Google Classroom, a cloud service for handling assignments, coursework, and grades. The new Coursework application programming interface (API) builds on the Classroom API announced last year.
“Today, we’re introducing new coursework endpoints, which allows developers to access assignments, grades, and workflow,” Google Classroom software engineer Ed Kupershlak wrote in a blog post. “Learning tools can focus on creating great content, and use Classroom to manage the workflow for assignments created with their content. And gradebooks and reporting systems can now sync grades with Classroom, eliminating the need for teachers to manually transfer grades.”
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The enhancements come as other companies strive to make their core products more widely relied upon in the education sector. In March Apple launched a Classroom app for iOS alongside the release of iOS 9.3, and in April Microsoft launched an app called Classroom in preview for Office 365 Education customers. Earlier this month Dropbox, which competes with Google Drive, launched an Education tier.
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Google has gained share with its Chromebooks, which lean heavily on cloud storage that companies provision through Google Apps for Education. Google’s launch of Classroom last year was a natural next step for that. Now, with more than 50 apps integrating with Classroom, Google is making the service more extensible.
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