Everything below is opinion. Like everyone else's opinion, it's up to you to figure if it applies to your situation or how grounded in reality it is...
Don't expect students to consume the material in the same order you add it.
Many students follow links from the reminder, meaning they'll end up on an assignment skipping right past your fancy home page. So have a couple cues to where students can find the resources they need to complete the assignment. "as discussed in the reading for chapter 3..." kind of things.
Don't expect every student to be perfect, or perfectly on time.
SOO many problems with faculty setting from/until dates on assignments, only to have to remove them because a student (or group) need to work on it early or late. Better to just set a due date, and take care of penalties manually. Also some students just won't turn in assignments, and for some reason it seems faculty get hung up on that more than in a face-to-face. maybe it's the empty spot on the gradebook.
Don't go all magpie syndrome.
Canvas has a ton of great features. It's a really bad idea to use them the first time you are using Canvas to teach. Keep it simple, straight forward, and focus on some key features that will help. You can bring in all the LTIs and plugins and embedded whizbangs once you have the basics, and are willing to walk your students through using the advanced features.
Don't get hung up on how you think Canvas should work.
Lots of faculty want their LMS to work a certain way, and then get frustrated and want their school to throw money at a "fix" when it won't exactly work the way they want. Instead, figure out the core problem you're trying to solve, and consider alternative ways of solving that problem. You want a report that informs you when a student finishes the module - why not have a post test instead? You can't embed that copyrighted content - is there something available for free or CC that covers the same content?
Don't reduce your class to one assessment and one content page a week
Chunk the class. Try to break up long content pages into something that can be read in a couple minutes, or at least a few separated pages (both to keep it digestible, but also better organized for later review). Don't add videos longer than 10 minutes. Try to change up what they're doing (so maybe add a discussion board in between long readings).
Don't try to freeform everything
Being online means that it's good to be organized, and pre-prep everything. Also consistency helps your students know what they're supposed to be doing and in what order. If possible, lead off each week/module with a content page that describes exactly what you want them to learn, and what they'll be doing. Try to have some graphics, maybe some branding, that you can pull through the whole course. Don't throw up a test or assignment the same week it's due, if you can help it - try to have it up a couple weeks early.
Don't forget an orientation
Provide info to students on how to use Canvas. If your school has a "How-to" course, provide the link. Otherwise show them the guides from Instructure, and info on how to ask for tech help. This is true even when you think all students have already taken courses through Canvas, because you may be using features that weren't used in their prior classes, or theres transfer students.
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