School 15 - Netsupport

Ms. Chen, a high school computer science teacher, begins her class by launching NetSupport School 15. She clicks “Blank Screens” and displays her objectives on the projector. She then distributes a Python starter file to all 28 students via “File Transfer.” During the coding exercise, she keeps the “Thumbnail View” open on her second monitor. She notices a student repeatedly visiting a gaming site – the AI Attention Insight flags it. Ms. Chen sends a private chat message: “Please close the game and focus on the loop exercise.” Later, she launches a 3-question multiple-choice quiz to assess understanding of for-loops. Instant results show 24 students mastered the concept; she schedules a small-group review for the other four.

With the rise of Google for Education, NetSupport School 15 levels the playing field. The Chromebook client is now virtually indistinguishable from the Windows client in terms of features. netsupport school 15

Version 15 introduces a refreshed, customizable interface for the Teacher Console. The new layout reduces clutter, offers dark/light mode options, and provides a "Quick Access Toolbar" for frequently used functions like "Show Screen," "Block Internet," and "Poll Students." She then distributes a Python starter file to

Teachers can now delegate "room monitoring" to a teaching assistant or aide. The "Teacher Assist" app allows a second adult to view thumbnails of student screens on a tablet or phone in real-time—perfect for large labs or special education settings where extra oversight is required. Chen sends a private chat message: “Please close

Problem: A teacher in a BYOD (Bring Your Own Device) school found students gaming during lectures. NetSupport School 15 Solution: The teacher used "Application Control" to block .exe files from running unless whitelisted. The "Internet Meter" showed exactly which student was streaming Netflix. Within one week, on-task behavior increased by 75%.