Welcome to Section 3.4: Evaluate
Welcome to this section. This section will give you an introduction to the fundamentals of Canvas about evaluation.
Structure
Notice that all sections have the same structure as the modules. Each section starts with a description of the learning goals and an introductory video. After the introductory page, you can go through the informative pages of the section to become familiar with the Canvas functionalities. This module ends with an (optional) assignment and quiz.
VU Amsterdam Canvas Community
Just like the other modules, this section contains a discussion forum. We invite you to share your ideas with your fellow teachers. Let's learn from and with each other. Curious about the ideas of your fellow teachers regarding grading? Check the Discussion: Ideas For Grading
Feel free to participate and join this VU Amsterdam Canvas Community!
Time invested
If you read all the content, make the assignments and take the quiz, this section will take about 45 minutes. Keep in mind that you do not have to read all the pages from the beginning to the end. Read the pages that are useful to you, and click ‘next’ if you think the information is not essential to you (at this moment). This course will remain available in the future, so if you would like to learn more about a specific subject or functionality in the coming months, that is possible.
However, some functions within Canvas are so important that we think it is necessary that you take a look at the pages regarding these functions. We have marked these pages as ‘Essential’. These pages form in our opinion the basis of Canvas and everyone that follows this course should at least visit these pages.
We have also created a very simple Canvas Example Course. This course features all – and only those (!) – elements that we have considered to be ‘Essential’. You can take a look at the Example Course by clicking here and subsequently clicking the Join this Course button in the upper right corner of your screen.
Learning goals
After completing this section, you know:
- That everything that can be graded, can be found in assignments
- How to make categories and how to add weight to each category
- The different submission types in assignments
- How to set due dates
- How to create a peer review assignment
- How to create a quiz
- How to use the different types of quizzes
- Graded quiz
- Practice quiz
- Graded survey
- Ungraded survey
- How to add questions to your quiz
- How to give feedback with annotations or general feedback
- Spoken
- Text
- How to use rubrics
- How to use the gradebook
- How to use the speedgrader
- How to use the learning mastery gradebook
- What outcomes are
- How to create an outcome for a course
Video
Watch the video to get an overview of the assignments functionality.
Try things in your Practice Course!
If you want to try out the things you have learned in this course, you can do this in your own practice course. You can find your course (Practice Course [VUnetID]) in Courses in the Global Navigation Menu (the blue column at the left side of your screen). This course will remain available in the future, so if you want to try something new later this year (or in the following years!), that is possible.
There are no students in your practice course, so if you want to try out functions that require student participation, there are two things you can do:
- View the course using Student View
- Add a colleague (or multiple colleagues) to your course as a student