Designing your Course with Modules and Pages
Designing your Canvas course can be done using Modules, Pages, or a combination of
both. The 糖心少女 Canvas Course Templates provide examples of how to combine Modules
and Pages in your course design layout. You can preview the 糖心少女 course templates
to get an idea of what would work best to guide the student learning in your course.
The course templates have been designed to help you get started structuring your content
in Canvas and can be easily imported into your course and customized for your needs.
For more information and instructions on how to preview and/or import the course templates
visit our 糖心少女 Canvas Course Templates page.
Modules
Modules organize your course materials by day, week, topic, unit, outcome, or any
other organizational structure. A module allows you to add files, assignments, quizzes, discussions, and external resources in a guided
learning experience. See more details about .
Pros:
- Easy way to direct students to all their resources for a given topic/unit/week.
- Provides a linear framework for navigating resources, much like a 鈥渂ook鈥 or 鈥淭able
of Contents鈥.
- Useful for learning materials that are set up in a sequence.
- Can 鈥渓ock鈥 a module to open on a specific date.
- Can create prerequisite activities for student completion before moving on.
- Track student progress through a sequence of learning activities.
Cons:
- Images and videos cannot be displayed in a module itself (students must click the
specific item to view).
- Text formatting is not available (no bold, italics, etc.)
- Modules do not provide a narrative to accompany the content. In many instances, instructors
want to provide a back-story or rationale for why a particular reading is assigned
or how it might relate to another reading.
- In situations where instructors want to give students a sense of what's taking place
and how all of the pieces of content fit together, Canvas provides even more capability
via Pages.
Pages
Pages create an opportunity to build organization in one location that is visually
appealing. You might use a Canvas page for each week or topic in your course and then
create links to the various activities, assignments, resources, and assessments for
that week. Or, you might use a homepage structure that has links to each important
page in the course based on the content. Within each page, you can use the Rich Content
Editor tool to insert text and images, embed a video, create a table, add links, and
a link to internal and external websites or other resources. See the for more details.
Pros:
- More visually appealing than Modules.
- Provides context for what's taking place this week, what the students are expected
to learn and which files, assignments and discussions they will need to complete.
- Can include text, links, embedded images and video.
- Text formatting is available (bold, italics, etc.).
- You can make student-editable Pages.
- You can assign Due Dates to Pages.
- For blended and online classes using pages is essential to provide context for the
content in Modules and remember that Pages can be added to Modules.
Cons:
- Pages cannot be set to automatically appear when you want (like a module).
- The Pages Index is organized alphabetically. This can be confusing to navigate for
students. If you have a lot of pages and are using the "Pages" view, it is recommended
to create a consistent naming pattern.
Combination of Modules and Pages
The most common method for organizing your course materials is to use a combination
of modules and pages. In looking at the Pros and Cons above, you might want to consider
using modules and pages to get the best of both worlds in Canvas. However you choose to guide your student learning experience in Canvas, it is important
to remember three things: welcome the students, engage them, and guide them on where
to go and what to do.
Design Tips
- The course Home Page is the first view your students will see when they enter your
course. Our best practice recommendation is to create a student-friendly front page
regardless of which method you use in organizing the student experience in Canvas.
A welcoming home page provides students with a grounding point for your content. Consider
providing your contact information, information about where to get help, and instructions
for how to get started and how to navigate to essential content on your home page.
By creating a home page that is inviting, intuitive, and informative, you can begin
to foster a culture of community within your course.
Steps for Creating a Home Page:
-
-
-
- Save & Publish!
- Whichever method you choose, be sure to to make visible only the menu links you would like students to view. Making them all
visible can be very confusing to the student.
- Canvas provides a built-in in the RCE. This tool can help you ensure that your Pages, as well as your Assignment,
Discussion, and Quiz instructions are accessible for all of your students.