Building School Admin Tools and School Reporting in ExamGiant

One of the most important parts of ExamGiant’s development right now is the school-level system. While students and teachers are at the heart of day-to-day learning, schools need their own structure too. That is why I’ve been working on school admin tools, school reporting, and the workflow that connects schools, teachers, and students in a more organized way.

The goal is to make ExamGiant useful not just for individual learners, but also for schools that want a clearer way to manage access, review progress, and support classroom learning.

At the school level, the system is being designed so that a school admin can sign up, be reviewed, and then oversee the school’s presence inside ExamGiant. That includes understanding the school’s status, viewing reporting, and monitoring the teachers connected to the school.

A major part of this work is teacher management. Teachers should be able to identify their school during signup, but they should not automatically receive full teacher access just by selecting a school name. That is why the workflow includes review and approval steps. This helps protect schools from fake teacher accounts while still making the onboarding process manageable.

School reporting is another big piece of the system. A school should be able to see how its students and teachers are using the platform, how many classes are active, and how the school is growing over time. The reporting side is being built to support that kind of visibility, while keeping classroom-level control with the teachers themselves.

That separation matters. School admins oversee the school. Teachers manage classes and invite students. Students complete the work. Keeping those layers clear makes the platform more realistic and easier to manage.

I’ve also been thinking carefully about how schools fit into the larger system. Some schools may operate on their own, while others may be paid for by a district. That means the school workflow has to be flexible enough to support both independent schools and district-supported schools without making things confusing.

There is still more to refine, but this school-admin and school-reporting work is a major step forward. It brings ExamGiant closer to being something that schools can actually use in a structured, practical way.

I’ll keep sharing updates as this continues to come together.

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