Thursday, May 27, 2021

Final Summer Canvas reminders

With Summer classes starting Tuesday…

 

Attached is a checklist (with corresponding links) to help your classes get off to a good start. And here is some information/reminders to help, too:

 

  1. View Canvas faculty notes and tips.

    1. Beginning June 1, there will be one new feature when creating assignments that is working and one new one that Canvas says should be working in the near future. When you choose Student Annotation for Submission Type, you can upload a document and have students type directly into it before submitting it. They see similar tools that are available to you when giving feedback on uploaded submissions in the Speedgrader. Canvas is working on a feature called Webcam Submission. When you choose File Uploads for Submission Type, Canvas will add a Webcam Submission button that allows students to take a picture of an object (say, a Math solution) with a webcam and submit it. I’ll let everyone know when this is available.
    2. On June 19, you will be able to view all new Canvas features and tools by going to the global navigation menu and clicking Help.

  2. Publish your courses by the beginning of the day your class starts so students can access them. To publish your course, go to the course home page, and click Publish.

  3. If you are teaching a DE class, contact your students prior to the start of the semester, and encourage them to self-enroll into the Quest for Online Success Course in Canvas. This is a readiness course that prepares students to succeed online. Learn more about Quest. I notified DE students by email, and many have already self-enrolled. A reminder from you would be good, especially since students who added late did not receive the email notification. Here are instructions you can copy and paste for your students:

    1. Go to https://clpccd.instructure.com/enroll/KDENL6. If necessary, copy and paste the URL (without the period at the end) into your browser.
    2. Log into Canvas with your W number. Your password is the first 2 letters of your first name, followed by the first 2 letters of your last name (all lowercase), followed by the last four digits of your W number. If you have already logged into Canvas and changed your password, use that password.
    3. Click the button "Enroll in Course".
    4. Click the button "Go to the Course".
    5. Complete the modules.


If you not utilizing the
Model Course Template and want to add Quest to the course navigation menu in your class, you will need to install the Redirect app (Settings – Apps – type “redirect” (without the quotes) in the text box. This app allows you to add the above web address as a link and rename the app.

  1. If you are teaching a DE class and want to see how your course measures up to the quality standards set by the Online Education Initiative, you can compare it to the OEI Course Design Rubric. The LPC Academic Senate has endorsed the rubric as the standards to strive for in DE classes. View the Senate’s resolution. Examples that meet the rubric’s criteria can be found in the Online Course Design Resources course.

  2. Make sure all of your content is accessible to students with disabilities. Everything you need to know about web accessibility, including “how-to” tutorials, is available in Module 5 of the OCDP course. If you don’t have access to the OCDP, you can get that same info in the Web Accessibility Course in Canvas.

  3. All online and hybrid courses must show evidence of an instructor’s regular effective contact with students, as per Title 5 and accreditation requirements. Title 5 adds that regular effective contact must take place among students, too. For hybrids, both types of contact are required in the online portion of the class. Read Hybrids @ LPC. When contacting students by email, online and hybrid instructors should use the Canvas Inbox for all of your email correspondences with students. The Canvas Inbox will automatically save the emails. Read more about regular effective contact. Also, view the CVC-OEI’s Student-Student Interaction Guide (contains concrete examples).

  4. If you want to learn how to pronounce students’ names, you can create a Page and turn it into a wiki by allowing students to edit so they can phonetically spell their names.

  5. If you need to give students extra time or extra attempts on a quiz in Canvas, use the Moderate Quiz feature. Too many instructors are editing their quiz and adding a student’s name under Assign To in the quiz settings while removing Everyone. The result is that only that one student’s score goes into the Gradebook, while the rest do not. Learn how to moderate a quiz. Also, when giving a student extra time on an Assignment, you can add the student’s name under Assign To in the Assignment settings, but do not remove Everyone.

  6. If you want students to have access to your class before the first day of the semester, go into Settings, and for Participation, choose Course. Change the Start date, and click Update Course Details at the bottom.

  7. The LPC DE Committee has developed recommendations, along with answers to frequently asked questions, that are intended to aid instructors—particularly new instructors—in determining how many students to add and when to add those students near the beginning of the semester. View the recommendations and FAQs.

  8. The LPC Online Learning web site includes a link called Faculty Resources, which was created for you. It provides information and resources for instructors online learning at LPC. The section also includes the DE Handbook.

  9. For financial aid and auditing purposes, you should record the last day of attendance for students who drop DE courses. This can be done easily in Canvas. In your course, go to the People page, click on the three dots on the right side for a student, and select User Details. This brings you to the student’s Profile page. Simply enter the date in the box under Last Day Attended. If a student dropped prior to Census, you can't enter the student's LDA into Canvas because that student simply disappears from the course. The best you can do is note the date elsewhere after monitoring your class roster in CLASS-Web.

    The last day of attendance is not the last day a student logged into your course; it’s the last day a student actively participated in class.
    Read Federal Title IV and Last Day of Attendance.

    Here is LPC’s DE drop policy:

    The instructor may drop students who miss the first meeting of a course. The first meeting of online or hybrid Distance Education courses is the first day of the class as specified in the class schedule listing. For these courses, instructors may drop students who do not log into their Canvas course and/or complete indicated activities by the third day of classes. DE instructors may drop students if they have not submitted work and/or accessed the class for two consecutive weeks. For Summer courses, DE instructors may drop students if they have not submitted work and/or accessed the class for one week.

  10. If you need (or want) a banner for the home page of your course, the attached file is a template to use. Just open it in PowerPoint, modify it, save it as a .PNG file, then upload it into Canvas.

  11. If you plan to use the online proctoring tool Proctorio, you need to understand how it works. View a faculty web page on Proctorio. You should put information about Proctorio into your welcome letter and syllabus. Here are links to an example welcome letter and an example syllabus. Both contain student language about Proctorio. Feel free to use it.

  12. If you weight your grades and offer extra credit, do not set up an Assignment group called Extra Credit and give it a percentage of zero. Doing so will not calculate extra credit earned by students into their grade totals. Learn about extra credit options in Canvas.

  13. If you let students use Canvas Studio for a discussion assignment and want to easily grade students in the Speedgrader, tell students to disable comments on their videos. This way, students are forced to reply by clicking Reply and typing a response. Then, in the Speedgrader, you will see all of a student’s posts when you grade that student. If comments on videos are enabled, you will have to hunt for comments while grading. But perhaps that is OK for you.

  14. You might want to export your gradebook on a consistent basis, such as every week. Every week might seem like overkill, but you never know what can happen, and nobody wants to jeopardize student grades. One note: When students switch sections in the middle of a semester, their grades and assignments do not automatically move to the new section. Exporting the gradebook from the students’ old section helps mitigate this issue.

  15. If you want to merge sections in Canvas and have not already done so, read the Merging Sections in Canvas page, and follow the instructions carefully. Read the other important info on that page, too.

  16. Canvas offers a Training Services Portal that is available from the Help icon in the global navigation menu. Resources include live webinar trainings, recorded videos, and actual courses. Zoom also holds live training.

  17. In every course, you will notice EvaluationKIT Course in the top box in Settings – Navigation. This allows the official faculty union student survey to be deployed to courses, so please do NOT disable it by clicking the three dots to its right or by dragging it to the lower box. Just ignore it. The link is not visible to your students unless you are being evaluated, and even then, it will only be visible for the duration of the evaluation. I wish the installation didn’t put the link there, but nonetheless, thank you for your cooperation.

  18. Faculty can get to the LPC Incident Referral Forms page from the Help icon in the Canvas global navigation menu. Click the LPC Faculty Support link, then click Las Positas College, and a link to the Incident Referral Forms should be on that page. You can also do a keyword search for “refer”.

  19. Every once in a while, we get a user or two who exceed the user or course quotas set for them and their courses in Canvas. In response, the DE Committee developed the Canvas Course Storage Guidelines.

  20. Wanda Butterly, who works part-time, and I will provide faculty technical support. You can also use the self-service page in the Canvas Help menu to access 24x7 chat, email support, and the knowledge base. We don’t work Fridays during the summer because of the district-wide campus closures. Our vacation schedules haven’t been set, either.



Good luck with your courses!

Scott

 

Wednesday, May 19, 2021

Canvas Spring 2021 semester wrap-up

Canvas instructors,

 

First of all, early congratulations on making it through an entire academic year during the pandemic! Hope the Spring semester has gone well. To wrap it up for Canvas and prepare for the next semester, please note the following:

  1. Here’s how course access at the end of a semester works in Canvas (note that Canvas changes are reflected in (c) and (d):
    1. You will have full access to your course until June 11 at 11:59 p.m. After that, you will only have read-only access. However, you will be able to export your course. At that point, get to the course by clicking Courses – All Courses. It will be listed under Past Enrollments.
    2. Students will have full access to your course until the term end date of May 28 at 11:59 p.m. (unless you have changed the Course end date and time). After the Term end date and time passes, students will have read-only access. They can get to the course by clicking Courses – All Courses. The course will show under Past Enrollments.
    3. If you want students to have full access after the Term end date and time, go into Settings, and for Participation, choose Course. Then increase the End date and time, and click Update Course Details at the bottom.
    4. If you don’t want students to have any access to the course after the Term end date and time, go to Settings, make sure Term is selected for Participation, and check the box that says: Restrict students from viewing course after term end date. Then click Update Course Details at the bottom.

      View a video on course availability.
  2. For each class, check the accuracy of your grades, then DOWNLOAD YOUR GRADEBOOK AND COURSE SEPARATELY!
    1. For students who do not complete assignments by the deadline dates, manually give them zeros in the gradebook. If you leave their grade cells blank, those missing assignments won't count against them in Totals when they check grades.
    2. Make sure you don’t have any grade columns that show as hidden when they shouldn’t be hidden.
    3. If you incorrectly gave a student extra attempts on quizzes by adding that student’s name under Assign To in the quiz settings while removing Everyone, you will need to add Everyone back in. You’d notice this in the gradebook if you have a quiz column with only one student’s score while the rest of the students have no scores. Once you add Everyone back in and click Save, all of the scores will show.
    4. When you are finished with grading, download your Gradebook by clicking Actions - Export. Keep your exported Gradebook on your computer and/or external/online drive.
    5. To archive your course and save it for safekeeping (in case anything bad happens to Canvas…and it has happened!), go to Settings – Export Course Content – make sure Course is chosen under Export Type, then click Create Export. Once the process is finished, click New Export to download the file to your computer and/or external/online drive. Note that you cannot open the resulting .imscc file on your computer.

      Exporting, downloading, and saving your Gradebooks and courses are critical! We have had incidents in the recent past where entire courses and class grades were lost. Don’t get caught without backups.

 

  1. When moving from one semester to another, you can either copy a previous semester's course content or export the previous course and import it into the new course. You can do either of these by going to Settings and choosing Import Course Content. If you then select Copy a Canvas Course, you might have to check the box to "Include completed courses."
    1. Learn how to copy a course.
    2. Learn how to export a course.
    3. Learn how to import a course.

      If you use the Hypothesis annotation tool, be sure to read
      Canvas Course Import and Hypothesis for special instructions.

  2. Also when moving from one semester to another, do not remove assignments from within the Calendar. If you need to remove assignments, do this from the Assignments area. If you need to remove quizzes or discussions, do those from their respective areas, too. This pertains to both the course from which you are copying and the course into which you are copying.

  3. Students have already been put into their Summer classes. They are scheduled to be inputted into their Fall classes Aug. 4.

  4. If you are teaching online during the in Summer or Fall, you should send a welcome letter to your students a week or so prior to the first day of classes. We offer a welcome letter template for your optional use, along with an online syllabus template, and an entire model course template.
    1. View/download welcome letter template
    2. View/download syllabus template
    3. If you are interested in previewing or using the model course template, view instructions on accessing it.

  5. If you want to merge next semester’s sections in Canvas and have not already done so, read the Merging Sections in Canvas page, and follow the instructions carefully.

  6. If you want to see what is upcoming in Canvas, go to the Canvas Release Notes page.

Scott

 

Friday, May 14, 2021

Canvas update/Summer students

On Saturday (tomorrow), Canvas will update our system with some minor changes. Students will notice a few of these when they submit assignments that you create with the Assignments tool.

 

  • There is an updated submission tracker that helps determine the status of their submission.
  • Rubrics will be on the submission page, not on a separate tab.
  • Feedback will now be found in the comment tray, not in a separate tab.

 

Information about the above (and more) can be found on a Canvas blog for this tool.

 

There are two other bigger changes with Assignments, but honestly, after getting mixed signals from Canvas, I’m not sure whether either or both will show up Saturday. The first is a Webcam Submission button for File Uploads, and this allows students to take a picture of an object (say, a Math solution) with a webcam and submit it. The other is a submission option called Student Annotations that allows you to upload a document and have students type directly into it before submitting it. It’s the same technology that allows you to annotate right on student submissions in the SpeedGrader.

 

If one or neither of the above features doesn’t show Saturday, they will show eventually. Of course, one Canvas person told me they will show in the “near future”, while the other said they are “not on the roadmap” yet. So go figure.

 

Finally, for those of you teaching summer courses, students are scheduled to be inputted into their classes Monday.

 

Scott

 

Monday, May 10, 2021

Fall Canvas shells now available

Canvas instructors,

 

Your Fall 2021 courses are now in Canvas. If you do not see your course under Unpublished Courses on your Dashboard, it’s most likely because your name hasn’t gone through the official channels to become the instructor of record yet. At this early date, there are several of these. Once you become official, Banner will process you into the Canvas course.

 

Some notes:

 

  1. If you plan to merge courses or sections, you will do that in Canvas. Please read Merging Sections in Canvas, and closely follow the instructions.
  2. When moving from one semester to another in Canvas, you can either copy a previous semester's course content or export the previous course and import it into the new course. You can do all of these by going to Settings in a course. While in Settings, DO NOT click the Copy this Course button on the right side; this tool creates a new course that your students will not be able to access.
    1. Learn how to copy a course.
    2. Learn how to export a course.
    3. Learn how to import a course.
  3. As an online instructor, you have the option to use the Canvas model course template as a starting point. The course is based on the Academic Senate-approved OEI’s Course Design Rubric and provides organization and structure for your course. If you are interested in previewing or using the model course template, view instructions on accessing it.
  4. The OEI’s Quest for Online Success tutorial is the student readiness tool used for DE courses at LPC. There is a Canvas version into which you can have students self-enroll. You can even have students complete assignments based on the tutorial. Learn more about Quest.
  5. Remember that everything in your course must be made accessible to students with disabilities. To learn how to do this, check out the Canvas course titled Web Accessibility Course.
  6. Students are scheduled to be inputted into their courses August 4.

Scott

 

Tuesday, May 4, 2021

Fall Canvas course shells

LPC faculty,

 

I wanted to let you all know that Fall 2021 Canvas course shells are scheduled to be created May 10. I will email you when they are ready. Fall students are not scheduled to be inputted until August 4.

 

Scott