Hi @rachael_donalds !
This question excites me! I've done quite a bit of reflection on my grading practices (Stuck in a 4.0-Scale World), and I continuously come back to the value of formative and summative feedback. It's so powerful to give students information that can help guide them through their learning. While students are point-driven, it's an on-going challenge to make them feedback- and learning-driven.
With my courses, a few ways I easily emphasize feedback in assessments is through Peer Reviews and Learning Outcomes.
With Peer Reviews, students provide feedback for their classmates. As an instructor, you can decide whether or not to make these anonymous between the students, yet you can see who-said-what. (How do I create a peer review assignment?) I think students pick up a lot by looking at peers' work, and they learn to value the time that goes into receiving feedback on their own assignments.
Last year, I ditched points altogether for my major projects. Instead, I made the projects complete-incomplete in the gradebook and focused on providing feedback with Rubrics. My students loved how learning objectives and standards were organized in the rubric, and how the Learning Mastery scores in the Grades page helped them document and plan for their strength and weakness. The Learning Mastery Gradebook was a huge push for me to provide feedback and to coach students on an individual basis. Unknown to the students, I documented grades on my old points-based system and compared it to their progress with standards. I was pleasantly surprised that I saw higher academic achievement when points were not a factor.
To encourage my students to truly utilize the feedback they receive from me and from their peers, I offer them an opportunity to revise any major project within two weeks of receiving a score or critique. If they are motivated to make changes to their project and resubmit, listening to the feedback they received, I usually allow them to resubmit without penalty. ...as long as their first attempt was given genuine effort.
I know there are many ways to get students meaningful feedback in any Canvas course. I'll leave my post at this, for now, as I could talk for white a while!
I can't wait for others to chime in. The potential in this collaborative discussion is amazing.
This discussion post is outdated and has been archived. Please use the Community question forums and official documentation for the most current and accurate information.