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Flipped Classroom

What is a Flipped Classroom?

A flipped classroom is an instructional approach that reorders the traditional sequence of teaching and learning. Instead of using class time for delivering lectures followed by assigning homework for independent practice, students engage with core content—such as recorded lectures or assigned readings—before coming to class. This shift allows faculty to use class time for active learning strategies, such as collaborative problem-solving, discussions, case studies, or project-based work. By front loading content delivery, faculty are able to use in-person sessions to deepen students’ understanding, address misconceptions, and support students’ application of concepts in real time. This instructional approach fosters greater student engagement and provides opportunities for formative feedback, peer interaction, and differentiated instruction—all within the classroom setting. (See Talbert, 2017 for additional information on flipped classrooms).

Traditional

Lecture In Class

Homework at Home

Flipped

Online Lecture/Learning at Home

Application and Activities in Class

To begin implementing a flipped classroom approach, an instructor might start small—such as by assigning a 10-minute lecture video for students to watch before class. This frees up 10 minutes of in-class time, which can then be used for an active learning exercise. Alternatively, an instructor may choose to fully redesign a course so that all instructional content is delivered before class, reserving class sessions entirely for collaborative projects and applied activities. Both approaches—whether starting small or going all in—are valid implementations of a flipped classroom model.

Why Might Someone Flip the Classroom?

A flipped classroom may make sense for faculty concerned with student use of generative AI. Having students engage in the learning activity in class allows instructors to see the learning unfold in ways that are visible, identify where students need additional assistance, offer targeted help, and practice concepts.

A flipped classroom may also make sense for concepts that are particularly difficult for students where they may need additional time. In a flipped classroom, students control the pacing of moving through the lecture, reading, or advanced content prior to class and arrive with questions, prepared to participate. In a traditional lecture, the pacing is set by the instructor. In a live lecture a student is unable to listen to the concept again, walk away and come back to it, slow it down and play it again, etc.

The key to successfully flipping a classroom is making pedagogical choices that align with the course goals, student needs, and desired learning outcomes. For the approach to be effective, in-class activities must be thoughtfully designed to build on the content students engaged with before class. If these activities are not clearly connected to the learning outcomes or fail to require application of pre-class materials, students may struggle to see the value of the flipped model and become disengaged.

Do I Have to Flip the Entire Class?

No. In fact, it is best to start small. Choose one class or topic and one activity that you would like to try in a flipped manner before flipping an entire class. Flipping a class simply to flip it is not likely to be beneficial to instructors or students.

Before flipping a class consider whether a flipped approach makes sense for the design of the course, the activities included, and the learning desired for students. Ask whether a flipped approach would align with the learning outcomes and how the content could be delivered to students before class in a way that is meaningful, engaging, and advances learning. And finally, ask what students can do in the class that would encourage meaningful learning without being perceived by students as busy work.

What are the Components of a Flipped Classroom?

A flipped classroom has the following elements or components:

  • Before Class Content: Supply students with content, whether readings or short videos, podcasts, that introduce the knowledge, skills, and ideas that will be applied in class. Include formative, low-stakes knowledge checks, worth participation points, such as brief reading quizzes or a reflection on the lecture, to help ensure that students complete the before class content to come prepared to class.
  • In-Class Activities: Once in class, students partake in active learning activities that involve application of ideas whether in assignments that are completed in class, group work, case discussions, labs, or problem-based learning.
  • Feedback Loops: Instructors provide real-time feedback to students as they apply their learning in class, students may provide peer feedback as well, the point is that students engage in application with meaningful support and feedback happening in class.

What are Some Tips to Ensure Successful Implementation?

  • Start small, flip one module before expanding more broadly.
  • Provide students with an explanation in the syllabus and during their welcome and introduction to the class about the flipped model, how it works, why you are doing it, and what the expectations are for them to be successful.
  • Keep the pre-class videos or modules focused on specific learning outcomes and concise.
  • Integrate Canvas quizzes that are a small part of the students grade to be completed before class, or begin each class session with a short, graded quiz to incentivize completing the before class materials. Alternately, have students come to class with one or two questions they have about the topic. Another successful strategy beyond multiple choice quizzes is to ask students to respond to short, open-ended questions where students choose 2-3 from 4-5 options (see Weinstein and Wu’s 2009 piece on readiness assessment tests for additional information).
  • Vary the in-class activities. If involving students in group work in a course, providing time during class for students to work as a group alleviates the difficulties of scheduling meetings outside of class or requiring student updates on status. It also allows instructors to observe group dynamics directly and intervene or provide guidance when necessary.
  • Collect feedback from students on what is working and what may need adjustment or refinement. A mid-semester survey on the model, engagement and what is and is not working may be useful.

What are Some Additional Resources on Flipped Classrooms?

  • The DIY Flipping Kit from Harvard Kennedy School and Harvard Initiative for Learning and Teaching Grants Program
  • Talbert, R. (2017).
  • Weinstein, S. E. and Wu, S. (2009). International Journal of Teaching and Learning in Higher Education, 21 (2), 181-186.

Top 10 Faculty and Instructor Strategies to Support First-Year Students

  1. Learn Your Students’ Names Early 
    • Make an intentional effort to learn and correctly use students’ names. It builds rapport, communicates respect, and shows you value them as individuals. 
  2. Normalize Help-Seeking Behaviors 
    • Explain what office hours are and how to participate. Emphasize that office hours are for everyone and not just for struggling students. Regularly invite students to visit during office hours or after class and consider offering flexible meeting times. 
  3. Explicitly Teach “College Knowledge” 
    • Many first-year students may not understand implicit academic norms. Clarify expectations around syllabus use, time management, participation, and email etiquette. Consider a syllabus scavenger hunt or “college skills moments” weekly. 
  4. Scaffold Assignments and Provide Exemplars 
    • Break major assignments into smaller steps with check-ins or student peer reviews. Provide models of strong work and use rubrics to clarify evaluation criteria.
  5. Validate Students’ Lived Experiences 
    • Incorporate a variety of perspectives in course materials. Encourage connections between content and students’ backgrounds and avoid assumptions about prior knowledge, students’ available time outside class to complete tasks, and financial situations. 
  6. Build Community in the Classroom
    • Use collaborative activities and low-stakes icebreakers to foster peer connections. Include group norms co-created with students to support a respectful and supportive learning environment. Give students points for in-class activities. Consider trying a flipped classroom approach.
  7. Use Transparent Teaching Practices (TILT) 
    • For every assignment, clearly state the purpose, task, and criteria for success. This clarity helps demystify expectations and empowers students. Interested in TILTing an assignment based on the Transparency in Learning and Teaching framework?
  8. Provide Timely, Constructive Feedback 
    • Offer specific, growth-oriented feedback and return graded work promptly. Make revision opportunities available when feasible, to reinforce a learning mindset and provide space and time for students to practice their knowledge and skills. 
  9. Share Resources and Refer Early 
    • Proactively connect students with academic support, counseling, financial aid, and mentoring programs. Embed in your syllabus and course announcements.
  10. Model a Growth Mindset and Compassionate Authority 
    • Frame mistakes as part of learning. Be approachable, but also consistent. Show students you believe in their capacity to succeed, even when challenges arise. It’s important not only to set high expectations, but also to show students that you believe in their ability to meet them—and to provide the support they need to succeed in the course.  

Supporting Teaching Assistants (TAs)

Before the Term 

Clarify Roles and Expectations 

  • Define TA responsibilities and duties including grading, labs, office hours, and discussions.
  • Specify hours, deadlines, and communication norms for TAs with each other, with faculty mentors or course coordinators, and with the department. If grading, clearly define the expectations on when feedback or grades will be returned to students and entered in the Canvas gradebook.

Provide Training and Orientation 

  • Share the course syllabus, goals, and prior course materials early. Include any information on areas where students may routinely struggle along with ideas on how to support students or any resources available to assist TAs in teaching particular concepts.
  • Recommend training on teaching tools (e.g., Canvas) and grading practices. Encourage TAs to participate in the TA Orientation and Training as well as ongoing professional development opportunities.

During the Term 

Meet Regularly 

  • Hold weekly or biweekly check-ins on how the schedule is going; review and update any initial expectations; and discuss any situations, areas, or events that TAs may need to process or require additional guidance or assistance.
  • Encourage TA input on what’s working or needs adjustment within a course. TAs may have additional insight into how to present a concept, word an assignment, or support students in their learning.
  • Make yourself approachable for questions, especially around grading, challenges with students, or time management.
  • Share teaching materials (slides, solutions, rubrics). Offer tips, model good teaching, and encourage reflection.

Include TAs in Course Planning 

  • Let TAs suggest section activities or review formats. Provide them with opportunities to develop their teaching skills and potentially try new ways to present content.
  • Discuss assignment handling and how to improve student engagement. Determine if any changes may be needed to a course to help ensure student success for the remainder of the term.

End of Term 

Provide Workload Support 

  • At the end of a semester, TAs often face a heavy workload with grading, final assessments, and wrapping up administrative tasks. To support them effectively, departments can provide clear grading rubrics, extended deadlines when possible, and access to collaborative grading sessions or office hours with faculty supervisors and mentors.

Give Constructive Feedback 

  • Thank them (verbally or in writing). Offer public recognition or recommendation letters when appropriate.
  • Provide specific, thoughtful feedback for TA development. Share student course evaluations or feedback with context. Consider organizing an end-of-semester reflection session, teaching portfolio workshop, or peer feedback group to help TAs evaluate and articulate their teaching growth.

Using Hypothes.is to Increase Student Engagement with Course Materials

Hypothes.is is a social annotation tool that integrates directly with a Canvas course, allowing for grade passback from the tool to your gradebook. As instructors increasingly look for new ways to engage students meaningfully with course readings and materials, Hypothes.is can be a helpful tool for creating community and generating discussion around course materials.  

Why Hypothes.is? 

Hypothes.is enables instructors and students to collaboratively annotate web pages, PDFs, and other digital documents directly in the browser. This shared annotation process encourages active reading, critical thinking, and meaningful discussions among students, which has the potential of reducing reliance on AI-generated discussion responses. 

Moving Away from AI-Generated Discussions 

Hypothes.is has the potential to shift student engagement away from AI-generated discussion posts toward more authentic and personalized interactions. Annotations require students to demonstrate direct engagement with the text, making AI-generated content possible but less feasible.  

Strategies for Using Hypothes.is in Teaching 

  • Guided Reading and Annotation Prompts
    • Provide students with specific annotation prompts to guide their reading, prompting them to highlight and comment on key arguments, confusing passages, or connections to course concepts.
  • Collaborative Knowledge Building
    • Encourage students to reply to each other’s annotations to build collective understanding. This interactive layer promotes peer learning and deeper engagement with the reading material.
  • Discussion Preparation
    • Use Hypothes.is annotations as a starting point for in-class discussions or online forums. Students’ annotations serve as authentic evidence of their engagement, providing insights into their individual thought processes.
  • Real-Time Feedback and Assessment
    • Hypothes.is annotations provide instructors with immediate insight into student comprehension and engagement, allowing for timely feedback and intervention.

Implementing Hypothes.is Effectively 

  • Clearly outline annotation expectations in your syllabus. For example: Hypothes.is is a social annotation tool that allows you to highlight, comment, and annotate reading materials directly on the page. Your classmates will be able to interact and see your annotations, which makes your contributions important to the assignment. Each week, you will make 3 annotations on the reading that is selected. Your 3 annotations should include: 1 question you have, 1 connection you can make to prior readings or class materials, and 1 response to another classmate’s annotation.  
  • Demonstrate annotation techniques and model effective annotations to show students what is expected of them. For more examples please see:
Example of Hypothes.is being used to review Marbury v. Madison Supreme Court case.
  • Regularly review and integrate student annotations into your teaching practice to show their value and relevance. For example, each week, students will highlight, annotate, comment, and discuss the reading(s) you have added to Canvas with the Hypothes.is integration. Skim the annotations and comments for understanding and alter aspects of your lecture or in-class activities to go over concepts and ideas from the readings that students are having trouble understanding.  

Benefits for Students 

There are numerous benefits to students and their learning through the use of social annotations tools like Hypothes.is including that it: 

  • Promotes critical and analytical reading skills. 
  • Engages students with OER content, in-person or online. provides data and strategies used in the 51 pilot use of Hypothes.is including impact and positive student responses.  
  • Enhances engagement with course content. 
  • Fosters meaningful collaboration and community building. 

How can I get Hypothesis in My Course? 

Please submit a support request: CASL Support Form. CETL staff will review your request and reach out for further details.

What is Formative Assessment

Formative assessment refers to a wide range of low-stakes, ongoing activities used during instruction to gauge students’ understanding, provide feedback, and guide next steps in teaching and learning (Sambell et al., 2012). Its purpose is not to grade or label students but to improve learning in real time

Unlike summative assessments, which evaluate learning after instruction (e.g., final exams or papers), formative assessments happen during learning. They serve as a check-in for both the instructor and the student to ensure learning is on track. 

Why Formative Assessment Matters 

  • It Furthers, Not Just Measures, Learning 
    • According to The SAGE Handbook of Research on Classroom Assessment (McMillan, 2012), the primary purpose of assessment is not to measure but to further learning. That principle is at the heart of formative assessment. It’s designed to support student growth by helping both students and instructors understand what has been learned and what still needs work. 
  • It Has Consequential Relevance 
    • When faculty dedicate time to administering and reviewing formative assessments, the results must be meaningful enough to justify that effort. This means the assessments should provide instructors with clear insights into where students are struggling and where they are succeeding. With this information, instructors can adjust their teaching to better support student progress toward learning goals. In this way, assessment becomes a powerful tool for learning—not just a checkpoint. 
  • Students Can Use It to Take Ownership of Their Learning 
    • Formative assessments are most powerful when students are active participants in the process. By using feedback to monitor their progress, students can better understand where they are in their learning journey. When they co-create assessments or contribute to developing assessment questions, they gain a clearer understanding of expectations and how to meet them. Encouraging students to regularly reflect on their learning fosters metacognition and self-regulation—essential skills for both academic achievement and lifelong success.
  • It Provides Valid, Targeted Feedback 
    • Effective formative assessments are aligned with clearly defined learning outcomes and reflect the way those outcomes were taught, ensuring that the information gathered accurately represents student understanding. When assessments are well-matched to instructional goals, instructors gain reliable insights into where students are in their learning. Technology-enhanced tools—such as adaptive tests, virtual engagement check-ins, and exit tickets—can further personalize and sharpen these insights. For example, an exit ticket involves posing a question at the end of class and having students submit brief written responses before they leave. These responses help instructors quickly gauge comprehension and adjust instruction accordingly.
  • It Helps Identify Learning Gaps
    • Students can use formative assessment to compare their self-perception of learning with actual performance, track their growth, and make necessary adjustments. This strengthens motivation and engagement when students feel a sense of progress and ownership. Through well-crafted prompts, questions, and activities, formative assessments reveal not only what students know, but also what misconceptions they hold or where they are struggling for instructors. This helps instructors guide students toward the next level of understanding with specific, responsive support.
  • It Must Be Worth the Time
    • Ultimately, the utility of assessment data is crucial. Formative assessment should: 
      • Inform teaching 
      • Support timely interventions 
      • Offer feedback that leads to actionable next steps 
    • If the formative assessment doesn’t do this—for the student or the instructor—then its value and continued use as is, is unclear. 

Examples of Formative Assessments 

  • Mathematics: Brief in-class problem-solving tasks with peer discussion, followed by whole-class debriefs 
  • English: Draft thesis statements or outlines for essays with guided peer and instructor feedback 
  • STEM: Concept check polls or simulations during lectures 
  • Humanities: Minute papers summarizing a reading or lecture’s main point 
  • Online courses: Interactive discussion board posts with instructor replies and peer responses 
  • Examples of Formative Assessments in Canvas:  
  • Best Practices:  

References 

  • McMillan, J. H. (2013). SAGE handbook of research on classroom assessment. SAGE Publications, Inc.,
  • Sambell, K., McDowell, L., & Montgomery, C. (2012). Assessment for learning in higher education (1st ed.). Routledge.

Tips and Tricks for Course Coordinators Using Canvas

Canvas can provide an effective means for Course Coordinators to communicate across multiple sections to help ensure a consistent instructor and student experience. What might Course Coordinators do with Canvas?

Organizing Course Materials with Pages and Sandbox Courses

  • Use Pages within Modules: Pages help to organize content without cluttering the module on the homepage with multiple items. It also allows you to provide context on course materials instead of just including pdfs or links on a module. Structure weekly or thematic content into a page in Modules to guide student progression. 
  • Sandbox Courses: Sandbox courses are great spaces to experiment and create new modules or learning events without impacting current or previous courses. Sandbox courses are also great for keeping copies of credit courses, so they are readily available to distribute to instructors or TAs. 
  • Pro tip: Request a Sandbox course to experiment with content and features without impacting live courses. 

Supporting Teaching Assistants and Adjuncts 

  • Unpublished Guide Pages: Create unpublished pages or modules visible only to instructors and TAs, containing weekly teaching guidance, answers to common questions, resources, or instructional notes. If there is a sequence of how you would like things delivered to students or back-up/extra in-class activities they can draw on, include these in an unpublished page only available to those with instructor or TA roles.
  • Pro tip: Consider Short Videos within these pages to explain more complex information.

Efficient Course Management with Blueprint Courses

  • Blueprint Courses: A Blueprint course can streamline content distribution and save lots of time. For example, if you have a course with 6+ sections, you only update the blueprint and the same content is distributed to all connected sections. This means you have the ability to update multiple courses from 1 course rather than adding resources to multiple sections manually. You are also able to lock certain items, meaning that instructors or TAs in each course do not have the ability to remove or unpublish certain items. Utilize Blueprint courses to maintain consistent course design, assignments, and settings across multiple course sections. 
  • Pro tip: Keep master versions of frequently used resources, files, and assignments in a dedicated unpublished module or sandbox course to easily copy and reuse. 

Communication Best Practices with Canvas Announcements

  • Announcements are a core communication strategy with students. Not only are students notified in Canvas, but they also receive an email notification with the announcement. These are a great way to maintain steady communication with students.
  • Adding Videos to announcements help with creating community and are especially important in asynchronous online courses. Students often state that it helps them know that instructors are not just a profile picture! Short videos in announcements may summarize the prior week, connect prior instruction to newly covered content, or explain misconceptions that you are seeing in homework/discussion.
  • Pro tip: Schedule weekly announcements ahead of time to remind students of upcoming deadlines, provide key information, or clarify common issues. 

Assessments and Grading

  • Rubrics and SpeedGrader: Rubrics provide a consistent grading experience to students and provide criteria for students to follow as they complete their work. Attach rubrics directly to assignments to facilitate quick, transparent, and consistent grading using Canvas’s SpeedGrader tool. Rubrics open up in SpeedGrader and allow instructors to click each box and automatically tally the score. This approach helps ensure a uniform assessment and grading of student work across all course sections. 
  • Attendance and Participation: Consider placing a higher value or weight on formative assessments in class for attendance and participation (15-25% of the course grade). These should be short activities such as think pair share, exit slips, polls, etc. 
  • Pro tip: Attendance and participation as a grade category offer a unique opportunity to put extra points on in-class activities. Consider upping the value if you are looking to increase attendance. By emphasizing activities, it places points on the actual learning rather simply earning points for showing up. 

Enhancing Student Engagement

  • Interactive polling is a great way to award points in class while also helping with student engagement. 51 students have said through extensive surveys that they appreciate being active and engaged in lectures with polling. This not only improves engagement but also builds classroom community. Integrate polling tools (e.g., Vevox), peer review assignments, and interactive discussions to boost student participation and engagement. 
  • Pro tip: Student view is a great way to see how your students will see your course. Regularly use Student View to ensure materials and assignments are accessible and function as intended. 

Data and Insights 

Canvas Analytics can help you identify how often students are accessing your materials. You can use the tool to tailor your messaging to students who may not be accessing the course as desired. Regularly review analytics and student engagement data to identify patterns, intervene proactively, and support student success. 

Tips and Tricks for Department Chairs Using Canvas

Creating a Departmental Sandbox

A departmental sandbox course allows you to centralize resources in Canvas, which is where most instructors work with their courses. These sites are currently in use across many 51 departments and allow departments to onboard adjuncts, TAs, and new faculty in a quick and efficient way. 

What can go in a departmental sandbox course?

Once you have requested a Canvas sandbox specifically for departmental use, you are now ready to centralize resources without affecting active courses. Materials you may want to include in the sandbox:

  • Meeting Agendas and Minutes: Organize agendas, minutes, and meeting recordings into clearly labeled Modules. 
  • Sample Assignments and Quizzes: Provide exemplary or template assignments, quizzes, and rubrics for departmental consistency and faculty inspiration. 
  • Faculty Onboarding Module: Create a comprehensive module containing teaching resources, best practices, policy documents, and relevant departmental guidelines. 
  • Shared Templates: Include standardized syllabi, grading rubrics, and assignment templates to ensure consistency across courses within the department. 
  • Faculty Development Resources: Share targeted professional development resources, such as Canvas tutorials, pedagogical guides, and technology integration tips. 
  • Assessment and Evaluation: Provide centralized access to assessment criteria, program evaluations, and accreditation documentation. 

Department-Specific Canvas Site for Students

Department-specific Canvas course sites (such as this created by CASL) are great ways to keep program major and minor students informed about department news and information. Enrolling students in a department into a Canvas course site brings the department to where students spend most of their time digitally – in Canvas. By enrolling students into the site, departments are able to communicate information directly to students via Canvas announcements as well as share information like major requirements, department or disciplinary news, job or internship opportunities, student club activities and much more. Further, departments can share university resources for students here, enhancing awareness and reinforcing the usage of services like the writing and tutoring centers or the library. Request a course from CASL and get started!

Using Canvas Outcomes

Multiple departments currently use Canvas Outcomes for program assessment and for accreditation or professional licensure reporting. By using Canvas outcomes at the account (program) level, you can easily run a report that tallies all outcome scores into one unified report, streamlining information with less aggregation of reports across courses.

What is needed to use Canvas Outcomes?

To use Canvas Outcomes as a program, program learning outcomes must be clearly defined and written in a way they can be mapped to courses.

  • Aligning Learning Outcomes: Clearly define and upload departmental learning outcomes into Canvas to ensure consistent tracking across courses. 
  • Tracking Student Performance: Link outcomes to assignments and quizzes to easily measure student achievement against established standards. 
  • Outcome Reports: Generate outcome reports to evaluate student learning, inform departmental assessments, and support accreditation processes. 

Canvas Notifications

For Canvas students, it’s generally recommended to enable notifications for critical events like new announcements, grading updates, and changes to due dates. For less urgent items like course content updates, a daily or weekly summary might suffice to avoid overwhelming the student’s inbox. Students can customize these settings at the account level to suit their individual needs.

  • Announcements
    • Students should receive immediate notifications for new announcements to stay informed about important course information.
  • Grading
    • Students can monitor their progress by receiving immediate notifications for grading updates (e.g., when an assignment is graded).
  • Due Dates
    • Immediate notifications for changes to assignment due dates ensure students are aware of any modifications to deadlines.
  • Submission Comments
    • Students should receive immediate notifications for comments on their submissions to promptly address any instructor feedback.
  • Course Content
    • While immediate notifications for every content update might be overwhelming, a daily or weekly summary can keep students informed of new materials without overwhelming them.
  • Invitations
    • Immediate notifications for invitations to group or collaboration activities can help students promptly accept and engage in these opportunities.
  • Conversations/Inbox
    • Immediate notifications for new messages in the Conversations tool (Canvas Inbox) are recommended to ensure students quickly respond to inquiries or announcements.
  • How to Customize Notification Settings:
    • Go to your Canvas account settings by clicking on “Account” in the global navigation menu.
    • Select “Notifications”.
    • Review the list of notification types and their default settings.
    • Click on the icon next to each notification type to choose your preferred delivery method: “Notify Immediately,” “Daily Summary,” “Weekly Summary,” or “Notifications Off”.
    • Save your changes.

Canvas 101: Essential Tips for Faculty and TAs

  • Sandbox Courses
    • Create a sandbox course to safely experiment with Canvas features and tools without impacting your live course. You can have as many as you would like!
  • Unpublished Pages for Notes
    • Use unpublished pages as private notes or instructor-only guidelines, saving prep time each semester. This can be helpful if you think of something new you would like to try next semester or if something did not go quite as planned with your students, you’ll have a note that describes that! 
  • Quick Importing and Copying
    • Quickly import specific content or modules from previous courses rather than manually recreating them each semester. The import tool is seamless and creates a carbon copy of your course in a new course section.  
  • Student View Check
    • Regularly switch to Student View to verify the accessibility and visibility of course content and assignments. 
  • Assignment Groups and Weighted Grading
    • Clearly organize assignments into groups (homework, quizzes, exams) to automate weighted grading calculations. Make sure your assignments have due dates!
  • Rubrics and SpeedGrader
    • Attach rubrics directly to assignments for consistent and quick grading using Canvas SpeedGrader. 
  • Scheduled Announcements
    • Schedule announcements in advance for reminders about deadlines, assignment instructions, or common questions. 
  • File Management:
    • Regularly clean and organize the Files area, removing unused content to reduce confusion. 
  • Inbox Management:
    • Encourage students to use Canvas inbox messaging, which helps organize course-related communication efficiently. 
  • Leveraging Canvas Analytics:
    • Regularly review analytics to identify students who may need additional support or engagement strategies. 

July 2025 – Newsletter

New Self-Paced Training…