Select the course from the Gradescope homepage that you would like to drop. Within the side navigation there is the option to Leave Course. Select it and confirm by selecting Leave Course again if you are sure. You will be unable to remove yourself from a course if you have already made a submission to an assignment within it.
To create a new course, go to your Account Dashboard by clicking on the Gradescope logo in the top left corner of the screen, and click Create Course in the action bar at the bottom. From here, you can fill out your course information. Note that this will not change settings in any existing courses.
If you have forgotten your password or are otherwise unable to log in, first go to the Gradescope website. Click the Log In button (top right corner). When the login dialog box appears, click Forgot…
Gradescope has three staff roles: Instructors, TAs, and Readers. Currently, all three roles have the same permissions when it comes to adding/removing students, uploading, naming, grading, and responding to regrade requests.
Replacing and deleting submissions If you would like to replace or delete a specific student's submission, hover over their name on the Manage Submissions page and click Show Details. The options to delete or replace the submission will appear beneath the student's name.
Additional security with LockDown Browser (Beta) Post-beta availability: The LockDown Browser feature is currently in beta. While LockDown Browser is in beta, instructors must email [email protected] to be able to enable this feature for their course.
If your institution has a Proctorio license, you can enable Proctorio's exam security measures on timed online assignments in Gradescope. With the Proctorio integration, you can choose to track students' web traffic, prohibit them from opening additional windows, record them and their screens, etc. while they work.
Grade assignments anonymously. Standardize grades across instructors and teaching assistants. Get detailed analytics on an individual and class-wide level. Grade handwritten assignments, such as problem sets, online.
Assessing student learning can be done directly on Blackboard or using tools such as Gradescope, a rubric-based grading tool. Also, online proctoring offers students and test-takers the option to take a proctored exam from any location.
When students complete an assignment on Canvas or upload their work through Gradescope, the IP address of the device they used to do that is recorded by Canvas or Gradescope. If they used the same device to go to Chegg, or two devices using the same wifi, the IP addresses will match.
Yes, Gradescope is working hard to help you prevent cheating and collusion through several different features including enforcing time limits, hiding assessment questions, and offering various exam security tools.
Gradescope offers a language-agnostic environment in which the instructor sets up the components and libraries needed for the students' programs to run. The instructor establishes a grading script that is the basis for the analysis, providing grades and feedback for issues found in each student's submitted program.
This includes assignment types, managing scans and submissions, Grading, reviewing and re-grading, and assignment statistics. Instructors can also duplicate assignments and download grades from this interface. Gradescope maintains an up-to-date resource on the Assignment Workflow.
In addition, Gradescope enables you to grade programming assignments (graded automatically or manually) and lets you create online assignments that students can answer right on Gradescope.
Once uploaded, Gradescope uses handwriting recognition to identify the students' names and responses, organizing them for grading. Gradescopes dynamic rubric provides flexibility in grading and providing feedback. The final scores can then be synced to Canvas and students can view the feedback.
Pieter AbbeelAlma materStanford University (PhD) KU Leuven (MS)Scientific careerFieldsArtificial intelligence, machine learning, deep reinforcement learning, robotics, unsupervised learningInstitutionsUniversity of California, Berkeley Gradescope Covariant.AI4 more rows
Joining a course via the Gradescope website 1 If your instructor told you to log in to Gradescope but did not give you a course code or an enrollment email, navigate to the Gradescope website. 2 Click the Log In button (top right corner). Then enter your email address (most likely your school email). Alternatively, if your school has the option, you can click School Credentials on the login screen and access Gradescope via single sign-on.#N#New users: If this is your first time accessing Gradescope with this email address, next, click Forgot your password? Enter your school email address. You'll receive an email with a password reset link and instructions. Once you set your new password, you'll be taken to your Gradescope Dashboard where you can find your course.#N#Existing users: If you already have an account with this email address, enter your password. This will take you to your Gradescope Dashboard where you can find your course.
Click the Log In button (top right corner). Then enter your email address (most likely your school email). Alternatively, if your school has the option, you can click School Credentials on the login screen and access Gradescope via single sign-on.
All the tools and tips you need to manage your personal or institutional account.
Assess students in a variety of ways and get detailed insights into what your students know.
Common questions that we get related to making the switch to an online grading workflow.
Instructor and student guides for using Gradescope with Blackboard, Brightspace (D2L), Canvas, Moodle, and Sakai