For the classroom teacher
Every section you teach in one gradebook. Attendance by period. The parent contact log that lives in your own Drive, not the district’s. The Friday newsletter drafts itself from the week. Your room’s name on the door, and the data goes with you when you change schools.
Your data lives in your own Google Workspace. Cancel any time and take it with you.





Saffron · Rivera ELA Classroom
Five moments from a real teaching week, with Saffron taking the parts that aren’t the teaching.
Friday’s exit tickets already have a suggested score against your rubric, waiting for your approval. Attendance is queued on the tablet. Marcus’s missing-work list is on the screen before he walks in. You poured the coffee. That was your prep.
You’re signing a permission slip at the front. One tap on the student who isn’t there, or you tell Saffron “everyone but Bobby showed up.” Today’s attendance is in. Bobby’s family gets a draft note in your voice.
Marcus’s mom asked about the late grades. Saffron pulled his assignment history and drafted a paragraph that’s honest about the timeline and kind about the kid. You read it during prep, changed one sentence, and sent. The Wednesday-night thread is closed before it starts.
A pile of graded papers on the desk. The weekend is right there. You photograph the stack with names and scores showing, and tap Record. The 28 marks land in the gradebook, the marked-up copies save to each student’s folder, and parents who asked for a heads-up get one in your voice.
The field trip, the new unit, the two compliments you marked in attendance, the assignment Marcus actually turned in. You read it, tweak the paragraph that’s not quite you, then send to all 124 families. The laptop closes by 5:15. You mean it this time.

Because the district gradebook is the district’s. This one is yours. The parent contact log, the assignment history, the weekly newsletter, the notes on the quiet kid all live in your own Drive. When you change schools, the district’s data stays with them and your CANOPY goes with you.
In your own Google Workspace. Student records are sheets in your Drive. Parent emails, lesson plans, and rubrics are Docs you own. If you ever leave, you keep all of it. We do not see it, do not sell it, and Anthropic does not train Claude on it.
No. Saffron is one button in the corner. Open her when you want help drafting a parent email or the newsletter, close her when you do not. Every other module (sections, gradebook, attendance, lesson plans) works exactly the same with her off.
Do you teach solo?
Canopy Solo · for the classroom
$169a month, or $699 once to own
Flat per teacher, not per student. Annual or month-to-month, your call. A thirty-day notice cancels either, and your data leaves with you.
Lead a team of teachers, a grade level, a whole school? K-12 schools have their own CANOPY →
$169 a month, or $699 once to own. Self-serve, no sales call. Live at your subdomain the moment you check out.