Search
There are 18 results.
Tag
Tag
All (49)
Activities (1)
Alt Text (2)
Assessments (3)
Asynchrony (1)
Authentic Activities (2)
Belonging (2)
Branching Scenarios (1)
Canvas (4)
Case Studies (2)
Collaboration (2)
Color Contrast (2)
Communication (2)
Community (2)
Content Creation (3)
Course Materials (4)
Discussions (2)
Diversity (3)
Equity (2)
Faculty Presence (1)
Feedback (4)
Formative Assessments (4)
Game-Based Learning (1)
Grading (3)
Group Work (2)
Hyperlinks (1)
Images (1)
Inclusion (4)
Inclusive Language (1)
Learning Objectives (1)
Multimodality (2)
Peer Review (1)
Peer Reviews (1)
PowerPoint (1)
Presentations (1)
Representation (1)
Rubrics (3)
Scaffolding (1)
Screen Readers (1)
Spreadsheets (1)
Summative Assessments (1)
Synchrony (2)
Third-Party Tools (1)
UDL (1)
Universal Design for Learning (UDL) (1)
Video (2)
Visual Accessibility (2)
Workload (1)
Written Assignments (1)
Format
Five Need-To-Know Rubric Grading Tips
Rubrics provide a framework for students, helping them submit stronger assignments while decreasing confusion as they write and create. While leveraging Canvas to provide clear, efficient, and consistent access to rubric, take a minute to learn a few settings, saving yourself valuable time and a possible headache.
Rubrics as a Tool to Support Equity and Inclusion
While student populations have become increasingly diverse, many groups, including first-generation, non-native English speakers, and individuals with disabilities, still face barriers and bias that can derail their success in college (Super et al., 2020). Traditional grading practices—including penalties for late work, writing in dialects other than standard English, and even plagiarism— are prone to bias and only perpetuate disparities, the research says (Feldman, 2019; Savini, 2021).
Academic Integrity in Assessment
To foster academic integrity, pair anti-plagiarism tools with clear conduct expectations and authentic low-stakes assessments. When designing and teaching online courses, maintaining academic integrity is frequently top of mind. In many cases, faculty may opt to adopt third-party tools to monitor student work. Despite the prevalence of academic monitoring software in online courses, however, the most powerful tools for promoting academic integrity are introduced much earlier in the course build process.
No Sweat Alt Text
What is “alt text”? Alt text is descriptive text linked to an image, graph, or other visual content that allows users to understand the visual without viewing it. Any image online should contain alt text, but guidelines differ depending on whether the image is simply decorative or related to other content on the page.
Representation Matters: Guest Speakers to Support DEIB
Guest speakers can support diversity, equity, inclusion, and belonging (DEIB) initiatives while promoting students’ academic and professional growth across disciplines. When designing courses, identify ways to integrate speakers into the curriculum, tap established networks, and ensure that any readings and assignments align with these efforts.
Offering Extensions in Canvas
Due dates are a useful pedagogical tool. They help students keep pace to complete the course, populate the To-Do List and Calendar with reminders for both instructors and students, and allow Canvas to work more predictably and efficiently, among other benefits. However, there inevitably come times when a student needs a different time frame than the standard allotment to complete work. This guide will help walk through the considerations needed to extend the due date on an assignment. (Note: Extending the due date of an assignment, discussion, or quiz is different than adding additional attempts at the work. For more information on adding attempts, see the Envision piece Two-Stage Extensions: When a Canvas Quiz Has Limited Attempts and an Availability Date.)