Building District Reporting and School Mapping for ExamGiant
One of the major areas I’ve been working on lately is district support inside ExamGiant. This is an important step because schools do not always operate independently. In many cases, a district wants to oversee multiple schools, review activity across those schools, and plan for student access at a larger level.
The goal is to make that possible without creating confusion between district responsibilities, school responsibilities, and teacher responsibilities.
Right now, the district system is being designed around a clear structure. A district admin can sign up for a district account, and once approved, that district can begin working with ExamGiant to organize the schools connected to it. From there, schools can be linked to the district so that district-level reporting and planning become possible.
One important part of this setup is school mapping. In other words, the district needs a way to identify which schools belong under its umbrella. I’ve been working on tools that allow district admins to submit school lists for review, and once those schools are approved and linked, the district can view and manage them from the district dashboard.
This matters because district support is not just about seeing names on a list. It is also about planning. A district may want to estimate how many students are expected at each school, prepare for licensing, and understand how usage is distributed across the district. That is why the system is being built to support both school mapping and student-count planning at the school level.
At the same time, I’m keeping the model clean. Districts oversee schools, but teachers still control classroom-level activity, including class codes and direct student participation. That separation is important because it keeps district management, school administration, and teacher workflows organized in a way that reflects how schools actually operate.
There is still more to build, but this district reporting and school-mapping work is a major step forward. It moves ExamGiant closer to being useful not only for individual learners and teachers, but also for schools and districts that want a broader view of learning activity and planning.
I’ll keep sharing updates as this part continues to grow.
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