GradingPal
AI grading with native Google Classroom sync
What is GradingPal?
GradingPal is a free AI grading tool that connects directly to Google Classroom, pulling in assignments and student submissions automatically. Teachers build rubrics inside GradingPal, and the AI analyzes each submission against those criteria, providing suggested grades and personalized feedback comments. Unlike BusyBee Grading, GradingPal syncs grades back to Google Classroom in one click — eliminating the CSV export step. It also provides class-level performance analytics, showing which rubric criteria students are struggling with across the class.
Key Features
A. Native Google Classroom Integration
Connects directly to your Google Classroom. Pulls in class rosters, assignments, and student submissions automatically. Pushes final grades and comments back to Classroom with one click — no CSV export required.
B. Rubric-Based AI Grading
Build custom rubrics inside GradingPal or import from Google Classroom. AI analyzes each submission per criterion, providing a preliminary score with evidence and a suggested personalized feedback comment.
C. Personalized Feedback Generation
Unlike simple scoring tools, GradingPal generates individualized feedback for each student based on their specific submission — not generic comments. Feedback references what the student actually wrote or did.
D. Class Performance Analytics
After grading, view analytics showing class average per rubric criterion, which criteria students most commonly miss, and individual performance trends. Useful for identifying concepts needing reteaching.
E. One-Click Grade Publishing
After reviewing AI suggestions, publish grades and feedback directly to Google Classroom with one click. Students see grades and feedback in their Classroom as normal — no indication that AI was involved.
F. Multi-Class Management
Manage multiple classes and course sections from a single GradingPal dashboard. Switch between periods, filter by assignment, and track grading progress across all classes simultaneously.
How to Use GradingPal: Step-by-Step Guide
Follow these steps to get started with GradingPal today.
Connect Your Google Account
Go to gradingpal.com and click "Sign in with Google." Authorize GradingPal to access your Google Classroom. This is the key step that makes GradingPal different from other tools — you give it read/write access to your Classroom.
Select Your Class and Assignment
GradingPal automatically imports all your Google Classroom classes and assignments. Select the class (e.g., "5th Period English") and the specific assignment you want to grade (e.g., "Chapter 5 Analysis Essay").
Set Up Your Rubric
Either import the rubric you already attached in Google Classroom, or build one inside GradingPal. Add criteria, performance levels, and point values. The more specific your criteria, the better the AI scoring will be.
Run AI Grading
Click "Start Grading." GradingPal pulls all student submissions and runs them through AI analysis. Depending on class size, this takes 2-5 minutes. You see a progress indicator while it processes.
Review Suggested Grades and Feedback
For each student, review the AI's suggested criterion scores and the personalized feedback comment. Edit anything that needs adjustment — focus your attention on borderline grades and open-ended criteria.
Publish to Google Classroom
Once review is complete, click "Publish All." Grades and feedback appear in Google Classroom immediately, visible to students and parents exactly as if you had entered them manually.
Real-World Use Cases
Elementary Teacher Grading Book Reports
A 4th grade teacher assigns bi-weekly book reports to her 28 students through Google Classroom. With GradingPal, she connects her Classroom, imports her "Book Report Rubric" (plot summary, character analysis, personal response, writing mechanics), and runs AI grading on all 28 submissions in one batch. Review takes about 45 minutes — less than grading two submissions manually. Grades sync back to Classroom automatically, and students receive individualized feedback, not generic comments.
Middle School Writing Analytics
A 7th grade ELA teacher uses GradingPal's analytics feature after each major essay to identify class-wide weaknesses. After grading a persuasive essay unit, the analytics showed that 60% of students scored below Proficient on the "Evidence and Support" criterion while performing well on "Organization." This data informed her decision to spend two class periods on evidence-based argumentation before the next writing assignment.
Managing Multiple Sections at Scale
A high school history teacher with 5 sections of 32 students each (160 students total) uses GradingPal to manage the grading load. All sections are connected through his Google Classroom. When he assigns a Document Based Question, he grades one section first, refines his rubric based on patterns he sees, then runs the other four sections. Total grading time: about 3 hours for 160 students, compared to 12+ hours manually.
Pros & Cons
✓ Pros
- Native Google Classroom integration with two-way grade sync — the most seamless workflow for Classroom users
- Class performance analytics per rubric criterion help identify what to reteach, not just what grades to give
- Personalized, submission-specific feedback rather than generic comments — students receive meaningful responses
- Completely free with full Google Classroom read/write access — no paid tier for core features
- Multi-class dashboard allows managing multiple periods and course sections from one interface
✗ Cons
- Requires Google Classroom — not compatible with Canvas, Schoology, or other LMS platforms
- AI requires Google OAuth authorization which some district IT policies may restrict — check with your IT department
- Performance on handwritten or image-based submissions is weaker than BusyBee Grading, which has more robust OCR
- Analytics are assignment-level, not longitudinal — cannot track individual student growth across the full year automatically
- Less effective for assignments without structured rubrics — open-ended creative tasks produce less accurate AI scoring
Frequently Asked Questions
Does GradingPal work with Google Classroom?
Yes, GradingPal is specifically built around Google Classroom integration. It connects via Google OAuth, automatically imports your classes and assignments, and syncs grades and feedback back to Classroom in one click. This is its primary differentiator from other AI grading tools. It does not currently integrate with Canvas, Schoology, or other LMS platforms.
Is GradingPal free?
Yes, GradingPal is free as of 2026 with no usage limits or paywalled features. Like BusyBee Grading, it operates on a free-to-grow model. Teachers should be aware this could change as the platform matures, but currently there are no costs.
What happens to student data in GradingPal?
GradingPal accesses student work through Google Classroom API with read/write permissions. It is FERPA compliant and does not use student submissions to train AI models. Data is processed for grading purposes only. Given that GradingPal has direct access to your Classroom (including student names and work), review their privacy policy and get district IT approval before deployment, particularly in districts with strict data governance policies.
How accurate is GradingPal's AI grading?
GradingPal's accuracy is highest for structured assignments with clear, specific rubric criteria. For an essay with rubric criteria like "Uses at least 3 pieces of textual evidence" or "Topic sentence present in each paragraph," accuracy is high. For criteria requiring interpretive judgment ("Voice and tone are engaging"), accuracy is lower and requires more teacher review. Most teachers find they accept AI suggestions approximately 70-80% of the time after initial setup.
Can students tell their work was graded by AI?
No. Grades and feedback appear in Google Classroom exactly as if the teacher entered them manually. There is no AI branding or indication visible to students or parents. The teacher is always the publisher of grades — GradingPal is a tool that assists the teacher, not a replacement that operates independently.
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