Instructure is an educational software company based in Sandy, Utah. It is the developer of the Canvas learning management system, which is a comprehensive software package that competes with such systems as Blackboard Learning System, SumTotal and Saba.
N/A
Google Classroom
Score 8.2 out of 10
N/A
N/A
$0
per license/per month
Pricing
Canvas
Google Classroom
Editions & Modules
No answers on this topic
Education Fundamentals
$0
per license/per month
Google Workspace for Education Standard
$3
per student/per year
Teaching and Learning Upgrade
$4
per license/per month
Google Workspace for Education Plus
$5
per student/per year
Offerings
Pricing Offerings
Canvas
Google Classroom
Free Trial
Yes
Yes
Free/Freemium Version
Yes
No
Premium Consulting/Integration Services
No
No
Entry-level Setup Fee
No setup fee
No setup fee
Additional Details
Must contact vendor for pricing information.
Education Fundamentals Version - 30-day free trial for qualifying institutions.
More Pricing Information
Community Pulse
Canvas
Google Classroom
TrustRadius Insights
Canvas
Google Classroom
Highlights
Research Team Insight
Published
Canvas and Google Classroom are both academic learning management systems. They are used across all sizes of educational institutions for course management, including assignment creation and grading. The difference between Canvas and Google Glassroom is that Canvas is primarily used by higher education institutions, while Google Classroom is primarily used by primary education institutions.
While Canvas does have a K-12 offering, it’s core use is for colleges and universities. It serves primarily as an assignment management and gradebook system, with additional features like discussion forums. In contrast, Google Classroom is more commonly found in earlier education, such as middle schools and high schools. It’s free for schools to use and is included in G Suite for Education, making it a low cost, accessible LMS platform.
Features
Canvas and Google Classroom both have unique focuses tailored to their target user bases.
Canvas better serves the more administratively-focused needs of higher education. It excels at document management, including assignment creation and management. The flexibility in assignment creation makes Canvas more appealing to higher ed institutions that encompass a very wide range of course content. It also has robust gradebook management for scalability with large universities.
In contrast, Google Classroom excels as a more accessible option in terms of price and usability. Its ease of use makes it accessible for younger students in remote or in-person situations, such as independent work in the classroom. Since Google Classroom is free for schools, it makes an attractive offer for schools and institutions that lack the budget for additional administrative or IT overhead.
Limitations
Canvas and Google Classroom also have some limitations and cases where they would be less ideal options.
For instance, Canvas is not as user-friendly as Google Classroom. It comes with more of a learning curve, and lacks as intuitive an interface. This difficulty can limit its usability among younger students, or even schools that lack the IT support to administer the platform. Since Canvas is not a free tool, it also comes with more of a financial burden than free options.
In contrast, while Google classroom is easier to use at face value, there are some more complex mechanisms and processes that can cause problems. For instance, integrating and interacting with other applications in the G Suite, such as Docs or Slides, have caused confusion for student users. For instance, managing permissions and sharing documents across the classroom can be less intuitive of a process and take some learning by students and teachers alike, particularly in younger classrooms. Google Classroom’s gradebook capabilities are also relatively limited compared to paid alternatives.
Pricing
Canvas is priced by quote from the vendor. There is a one-time implementation fee and then an annual subscription cost.
Google Classroom is free for schools to use, and is included in the G Suite for Education package as well.
Features
Canvas
Google Classroom
Learning Management
Comparison of Learning Management features of Product A and Product B
If you have a school you can let teachers easily create new deadlines which [automatically] get shown in the calendar. Teachers can also [temporarily] hide deadlines [until] they've given the explanation about the tasks. [Besides] that the teacher can also choose what should be uploaded, should it be a link, file, pdf, link,...
- During the pandemic, the college needs a fast and easy solution to conduct Google Classroom. The integration with Google Accounts and Google Meet allows the university to run and access the Classroom on a large scale. - The teacher wants to conduct some exams in third-party software like Moodle. But we have not found any plugin for this famous open-source learning platform. The exam system in Google Classroom is so poor that it doesn't even fully screen the test when students are writing their exams.
Learning management - Even as the educational landscape rapidly shifts due to current events, Canvas is a great LMS for providing a consistent learning environment for students.
Mobile accessibility - Students can access their courses on Canvas from a variety of devices, including their smartphones.
Rich content - Instructors have the ability to create dynamic and engaging content for their courses.
Student-teacher communication - I love using Classroom for this because my students can always go back and check what was on Classroom by looking through the stream. This way they don't have to go dig through emails to find what they're looking for.
Posting to multiple classes - I can post the same announcement or assignment to multiple classes at once without having to repeat the process or send separate emails.
Streamlining grading - when students turn work in on Classroom, it all goes to one place and then when I'm grading I can open their documents directly from Classroom or my Drive folder. This way, I'm not looking through emails and Google Doc shared files for their assignment.
Although usually in the discussion with other LMS apps such as Schoology and Canvas, Google Classroom doesn't possess as in-depth of a platform. There is no ability to set individual learning paths, pace student work with completion settings, or embed other apps directly into teacher-created assignments.
The assignment creation options are limited. Teachers can only choose from creating an assignment (usually a link with directions), a material (usually a doc/slide/website, etc), a question, and a quiz.
With gamification taking on a new lens in education, there really isn't any way to use gamification elements with Google Classroom. There isn't any way to create Individual learning paths, or use badges and micro-credentials within Classroom. Outside programs would have to be used.
Several factors contribute to my "10" rating. First, our university just made an enormous switch to Canvas, after we were with Blackboard for almost a decade. So garnering buy-in was critical, and not something we took lightly. After nearly 18 months (start to finish) of training faculty, educating stakeholders, and migrating courses, I am not looking to make a change again anytime soon. But I am happy with the result and the product overall and that is also demonstrated in my rating.
Testing is particularly important in online learning, and Google Classroom falls far short of other learning management systems in this regard. Security is also a concern: while account control is reasonable for the account used with Google Classroom, the person controlling a particular account is often able to, for example, forward or download proprietary materials.
The functions in Canvas are well integrated and consistent across the application, and mostly intuitive. Overall navigation and setup is streamlined through integrated features and navigation. The feedback we've gotten from our program participants is that it is easy to learn to use. It also integrates well with third party software like Google Docs and Blackboard Collaborate web conferencing software
This is only a product I would recommend to a humanities teacher. Math and science teachers cannot use this product the same way that I can as an English teacher. It is great for word process and for reading, but unable to handle the demands of math and science. Therefore, I would highly recommend this product to English or Social Studies teachers, but NOT math or science teachers
I do not personally use Canvas support since we have a central office that helps us. However, our central office always has the answers we need and are always able to solve our issues - so I would assume that get great support from the Canvas team on their end. They also offer great training, which uses materials directly from Canvas
Since this platform is provided by Google, the technical support is better than any others, and we are not required to bother about the space constraints for adding the contents. If we have a good uninterrupted internet facility we can access Google Classroom without any delay or lag. They have app support in both Android and iPhone.
Once you purchase and sign the contract there is nothing to install or hardware to buy. You can almost immediately start using it and have courses up and going within weeks. We signed in December and had pilot courses online ready to go for the start of school in January
It was relatively easy to implement due to the simplicity of the platform. Even our more technology challenged teachers found it easy to get started with Google Classroom.
Canvas is in the experience way better than Google Classroom. Canvas has a more robust agenda system that also allows adding in new personal deadlines. [Assignments] can be submitted past [the] deadline (if allowed), this isn't allowed by Google [Classroom], If you're too late you can't submit anything anymore. In Classroom [assignments], presentations/theory, and [announcements] are all put in 1 feed instead which gets confusing way faster.
Skyward and Google Classroom are completely different programs that are used for completely different things. The only comparable areas are communication with students. Skyward does so through the class rosters and message center and Google Classroom does so through the classrooms for each student and their teacher, but each is unique in their own way.
Teachers have consolidated their content onto one platform which has decreased reliance of students on so much support staff assistance to access content.
Canvas has helped make technology transitions more seamless for the school community.
Once teachers have set up their page, Canvas really takes care of it all- they have much more time to focus on content creation and synthesis rather than the actual learning management system.