Checking grades used to mean hunting down a printed report card or waiting for a parent-teacher night. Campus Student kills that wait.
If your school uses Infinite Campus, this app is basically the student portal in your pocket. No more logging into a clunky desktop site just to see if that history assignment actually got turned in. You open the app, and there it is: your schedule, your grades, your attendance record, and any announcements your school decided to blast out. It’s not flashy, but it gets the job done.
The main screen shows your classes as cards. Tap one, and you’ll see your current grade, upcoming assignments, and anything marked missing. That’s the real win here — no surprises. If a teacher posted a “hey, this is due tomorrow” announcement, it’s right there. The attendance tab is brutally honest, too. Every tardy, every absence, color-coded and timestamped. It’s a little scary how much data is just sitting there, but it’s useful data.
Navigation is straightforward. A hamburger menu on the left lets you jump between grades, schedule, assignments, and messages. The schedule view shows your day by period, which is handy for those mornings when you can’t remember what room you’re supposed to be in. The assignment list lets you filter by class or due date, so you can prioritize what’s actually urgent. No gamification, no social feed, no distractions. Just the facts.
It’s not perfect. The design feels dated — think early 2010s app aesthetic, with a blue-and-white color scheme that doesn’t do much. Some users report that it can be slow to load, especially during peak times like the end of a grading period. And if your school’s Infinite Campus setup is messy (some are), the data might not always line up perfectly. But for a free app with over a million installs, it’s reliable enough for daily use.
Who’s this for? Any student whose district uses Infinite Campus. Teachers and parents might prefer the web version, but for quick checks between classes, this app is your best bet. One tip: turn on notifications for grade changes and missing assignments. That’s where it really earns its keep.