Submissions

Students submitting their own work

The class uploads their own pages, named and sorted before you open them.

The scanning step exists because you are collecting paper. If students submit digitally themselves, the scanner, the splitting, and the name matching all stop being your problem. Work arrives already attached to the right student.

What a student does

  1. They open InteGrade from your course in Canvas and see their courses and assignments.
  2. They pick the assignment and choose to submit.
  3. They add their pages: PDFs, photos, or shots taken with their phone camera right there.
  4. They arrange the pages (reorder, rotate, drop the blurry one) and submit.
Screenshotthe student submission builder with several pages arranged

Their pages stay on their own device until they actually submit, so a half-finished attempt is never sitting in your queue.

Replacing a submission

A student gets one submission per assignment, and they can replace it as many times as they like up to the due date. After the due date it locks. When they replace it, their previous pages are loaded back in, so fixing one bad photo does not mean uploading all six again.

What you get

Submissions land matched to the student already. No scanning, no name region, no review queue: the parts of bulk scans that exist to work out who wrote what simply do not apply.

It comes with Canvas

Students are identified through Canvas, so this is not a standalone student login you can switch on by itself; it arrives with the Canvas connection.

Verify before publishsettle before publish whether students really need Canvas - the upgrade pitch says they "upload their own work from a simple link", but today students sign in through Canvas and there is no standalone login. It is the difference between a feature a school without Canvas can buy and one it cannot
Verify before publishconfirm what a student sees if they open a submission link after the due date, and whether instructors can reopen it.