Google Meet is set to make classroom life more engaging than ever
Google Meet update should make teachers' lives a whole lot easier
Google Meet will soon receive a number of new features aimed at making classroom life smarter and more intuitive for teachers and pupils alike.
First up is an addition to the video conferencing service that will automatically transcribe lessons into a Google Doc, making it much easier for teachers and lecturers to share past sessions.
Available on Google Workspace for Education Plus and Teaching and Learning Upgrade plans, the company says the move will save space compared to a full recording, and can make it easier for students to quickly find certain sections or areas to focus on.
Google Meet in schools
Elsewhere, Google Meet sessions on Workplace for Education can now host polls and Q&A sessions, which were previously limited to enterprise users, and use picture-in-picture to manage class presentations whilst keeping all the class pupils in sight.
Public events such as school assemblies and prize givings can also now be livestreamed on YouTube, giving parents, relatives and friends an easier way to be part of the big occasions, or helping involve more people in board meetings.
Google has also launched a new education-focused app to Chrome OS, with the new Screencast service giving teachers the chance to build up a video library of past lessons shared via Google Drive.
These videos can be edited, customized and given transcription using Screencast, and also support stylus input, allowing students (and teachers) to draw or annotate videos.
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Screencast will be available from Chrome OS version M103, with the company doing some final tests and trials before launching.
The news comes shortly after the company announced it would be bringing Google Meet together with its more consumer-focused Duo platform into one single platform.
The move will provide users with "a single, integrated solution for both video calling and meetings", as Duo is renamed to Google Meet later in 2022.
Mike Moore is Deputy Editor at TechRadar Pro. He has worked as a B2B and B2C tech journalist for nearly a decade, including at one of the UK's leading national newspapers and fellow Future title ITProPortal, and when he's not keeping track of all the latest enterprise and workplace trends, can most likely be found watching, following or taking part in some kind of sport.