Google Classroom in 2026: The Changes That Change Everything

The 2026 Google Classroom updates have reorganized the product around AI. See what changed and what it means for your educational institution.

by Cleverson

Google Classroom in 2026: The Changes That Change Everything

The 2026 Google Classroom updates are not cosmetic adjustments — they are a reorganization of the entire product around artificial intelligence. In just a few months, Google delivered AI-generated audio lessons, assisted writing feedback, a redesigned dashboard, and the promise of bringing Gemini into Moodle. I've gathered everything that changed in Google Classroom this year, with official sources, and explain what each new feature means for those managing education.

TL;DR

  • Google Classroom has reorganized around AI: audio lessons, assisted feedback, and a new dashboard arrived between January and April 2026.
  • Podcast-style audio lessons are generated by Gemini and are already available in Education Fundamentals, Standard, and Plus editions.
  • AI-suggested writing feedback speeds up grading of long texts, but requires the Education Plus edition.
  • Google announced Gemini for Moodle via LTI integration, bringing the two main learning environments closer together.
  • For Brazilian institutions, choosing between Google Classroom and Moodle is no longer just a matter of price.

BETT 2026: Why Google Accelerated Everything at Once

BETT, held in London, is the world's largest educational technology fair. It was at the 2026 edition that Google gathered months of work into a single announcement. The message was clear: Classroom is no longer a digital assignment board; it has become a platform built around Gemini, the company's artificial intelligence model.

Historical context is important. Google Classroom was launched in 2014 as a simple way to distribute and collect assignments. In just over a decade, the product received over 800 updates. None of them reoriented Google Classroom like the 2026 wave of new features.

At the BETT announcement, Google released Gemini 3 Pro — its most capable model — at no cost for educational accounts. It also added Gemini 3 Flash and Nano Banana Pro, aimed at generating images and visualizations. In practice, teachers can create infographics and recap slides without leaving the lesson flow.

What catches my attention most, as a CTO who has followed educational platforms for over 15 years, is not a single feature. It's the pace. Three major features went from concept to reality between January and April 2026. Those managing education need to keep up with this calendar, because each delivery changes what students and teachers expect from the tool. The full announcement is on the official Google for Education blog.

Podcast-Style Audio Lessons Generated with Gemini

The first major delivery of 2026 came early. Since January 6, teachers can generate podcast-style audio lessons within Google Classroom using Gemini. The feature transforms course content into a narrated conversation that students can listen to on their way to school, at the gym, or before bed.

Control remains with the teacher. They define the grade level, topic, learning objectives, and conversation style — number of voices and whether the tone is interview-like or informal chat. Gemini creates the script and narration based on these choices.

Where Audio Lessons Work Best

Audio is an underestimated format in education. It reaches students in moments that text cannot. For exam review, reinforcing a difficult concept, or making material accessible to those with reading difficulties, audio lessons are effective. It's the same principle behind the good use of notifications and alternative channels to keep students engaged.

What to Consider Before Adopting

Two restrictions matter. The feature is available in Google Workspace for Education Fundamentals, Standard, and Plus editions, and the administrator must enable it by age group — usage is restricted to those over 18. And the golden rule of any AI feature in Google Classroom today applies: the teacher reviews the result before publishing, because the model can make mistakes.

AI-Suggested Writing Feedback When Grading

Grading essays is the silent bottleneck for any teacher. Reading thirty texts and writing a useful comment for each takes hours. This is the problem Google Classroom tackled with the AI-suggested feedback feature, launched on February 19, 2026, and available to all domains by March 30.

How it works is straightforward. When grading a written assignment, the teacher clicks "Help me write" and Gemini generates a suggested comment tailored to the student's text, grade level, and assessment focus. The teacher reads, edits, and refines before sending. Final control remains human — AI only drafts.

Here the limitation is stricter. The feature requires the Education Plus edition or the Teaching and Learning add-on, works only in English for now, and is also restricted to users over 18. For Brazilian primary schools, this means waiting. For language courses and higher education, it's already testable.

The real gain is not just grading faster. It's delivering specific feedback while the student still remembers what they wrote. Feedback that arrives two weeks later becomes a grade. Feedback that arrives the next day becomes learning. The official documentation is in the Google Workspace updates.

The New Google Classroom Dashboard: From Board to Dashboard

For years, the Google Classroom home screen was basically a list of classes. In 2026, it is becoming a real dashboard, with different information for each type of user.

  • School administrators see student engagement metrics, with an aggregated view of how classes are performing.
  • Teachers receive insights about their own class, with signals of who is keeping up and who has fallen behind.
  • Students find upcoming deadlines gathered in one place, reducing the excuse of "I didn't see the assignment."

There is also a new layer of transparency about AI. The Google Classroom dashboard now records how students interact with Gems created by the teacher and with NotebookLM. Instead of pretending AI doesn't exist in the classroom, the school gains data to evaluate this use openly.

The dashboard is in a pilot phase, with open enrollment for interested institutions. If you manage a large operation, it's worth joining the pilot early: dashboards change how coordination sees daily life, and anticipating that avoids a rush later.

Recording Audio, Video, and Screen Directly in Assignments

Another 2026 Google Classroom update seems small but solves an old friction. Teachers and students can now record and attach audio, video, and screen captures without leaving the platform — in assignments, announcements, and feedback.

Before, recording an explanation meant opening another tool, exporting the file, uploading it somewhere, and pasting the link. Each step was a chance for the teacher to give up. With native recording within Google Classroom, video feedback stops being an exception.

The uses are concrete. A math teacher records the solution to a difficult exercise instead of typing it all out. A language student records pronunciation for the teacher to evaluate. A student with writing difficulties responds via audio. Screen capture helps in any discipline that relies on software. It's accessibility and clarity in one feature.

Gemini in All Languages and NotebookLM in Students' Hands

Until early 2026, Gemini within Google Classroom only spoke English. Starting in April, Google began offering it in all languages supported by Classroom where Gemini also works. For Brazil, this is the difference between a demo feature and a daily-use feature.

The second change puts AI in the student's hands, not just the teacher's. Higher education students aged 18 and over can now create their own notebook in NotebookLM, from the Gemini tab in Google Classroom, using materials the teacher has made available in the class.

The difference is subtle and important. The student is not talking to a generic internet AI — they study with an AI anchored in the course material. Questions, summaries, and reviews come from the content the teacher curated. This reduces the risk of incorrect answers and keeps study within the course scope.

Learning Standards: Brazil Enters the Map

A discreet new feature has special weight for us. Google Classroom now allows tagging assignments with official learning standards — and Brazil is on the initial list, alongside the UK, Australia, Canada, Japan, and Mexico, with Italy on the way.

In practice, the teacher associates each task with a competency or skill from an official curriculum. For Brazilian schools, this opens the way to align activities with the BNCC within the platform itself, without a parallel spreadsheet. The feature came from a partnership between Google, the 1EdTech consortium, and Common Good Learning Tools.

Why does this matter for management? Because curriculum coverage reports stop being manual work. Coordination and supervision can see, with a few clicks, which skills have been covered and which have been left out. In pedagogical auditing, this data is gold.

Gemini Also Comes to Moodle (And That Changes the Game)

The news that most interests those working with Moodle almost went unnoticed in the announcement. Google confirmed that Gemini will come to Moodle via an LTI integration.

LTI stands for Learning Tools Interoperability — an open standard that allows plugging external tools into a virtual learning environment. It's the same technology that connects videoconferencing, question banks, and external graders to Moodle. With the Gemini LTI integration, an institution running Moodle gains access to Google's AI without needing to adopt Google Classroom as a platform.

This defuses a false dilemma. For a long time, adopting Google's AI in the school seemed synonymous with switching from Moodle to Classroom. Not anymore. The institution maintains control, data, and flexibility of Moodle, while still offering AI resources to teachers.

For those who have already invested in a mature Moodle environment — with plugins, integrations, and a custom app — this is the best news of the package. If you are thinking about taking your Moodle to mobile, it's worth understanding the advantages of a custom Moodle app before deciding anything.

Google Classroom or Moodle: What Changes in Your Decision

With so many new features, the question is natural: does it still make sense to use Moodle, or does Google Classroom already solve everything? The honest answer is that the two solve different problems, and the 2026 updates haven't erased that difference.

Criteria Google Classroom Moodle
License cost Included in Google Workspace for Education Open source, no license
Adoption curve Low, streamlined interface Medium, more configurable
Customization Limited to what Google releases Full, via plugins and themes
AI features Native and integrated Gemini Gemini via LTI, coming soon
Data control In Google's environment On the institution's server
Own mobile app Not available Yes, with custom app
Best for Schools in the Google ecosystem Institutions seeking autonomy

Google Classroom shines where the school already lives within Google Workspace and wants simplicity. Adoption is fast, and the cost of AI is now practically zero. The price of this convenience is dependency: you use what Google decides to release, in the order it decides.

Moodle shines where the institution wants autonomy — data control on its own server, unlimited customization, and a branded app. With Gemini arriving via LTI, Moodle no longer falls behind on AI. If your question is mobile, this comparison between the official Moodle app and a custom app helps you decide. And remember: well-used push notifications drive engagement more than any isolated AI feature.

My practical advice: don't choose by trend. Choose by the level of control your operation needs. A small school within Workspace tends to be happy with standard Google Classroom. An institution that sells courses, needs its own brand, and wants data under its domain tends to be better off with Moodle — now with AI included.

Conclusion: What to Do with These Updates Now

The 2026 Google Classroom updates send a clear message: AI has stopped being an experiment and has become a base layer of digital education. Audio lessons, assisted feedback, data dashboards, and curriculum standards are not decorations — they change the routine of those who teach and those who coordinate.

If your institution uses Google Classroom today, a simple plan is worthwhile: review the license editions you have contracted, decide which AI features make sense by age group, and train teachers before the novelty turns into chaos. Technology without training becomes frustration.

If your institution runs Moodle, the message is reassuring. The arrival of Gemini via LTI shows that you don't need to abandon your environment to have quality AI. The best next step is to strengthen what already works — starting with the student mobile experience. The Agathas Web team has worked with Moodle for over 15 years and can help design that path.