Hi @KeithBlakeslee
we are one of the largest UK University apprenticeship providers with nearly 30 apprenticeships across the institution including large scale police and nursing apprenticeships, over half of DAs are in the faculty which I support as a Learning Technologist.
To date (since the introduction of Canvas seven years ago) the Canvas LMS is doing exactly what we want it to for Degree Apprenticeships with less difficulty than we have encountered with either our SIS system, nor our "integrated" third party e-portfolio choice which we are currently moving away from.
- Having a positive relationship with crosslisting is key to what we do
Units of delivery (in our speak "modules") are generated according to the trimester in which they start, the relevant teachers, students, assessment, module definition form and assessments are automatically provisioned via some excellent middleware created by our IT Team, and assignments are managed via an eVision integration feeding all relevant data and updates to Canvas where students submit and work is graded.
Where a DA is co-taught with another DA, and occasionally non-DA, crosslisting allows us to have common content which (since June) can be differentiated by section (which corresponds to the occurrence (year, module, mode, location and sequence). Assignments are always differentiated by occurrence (Canvas section), which means that the niggly DA requirements appear only to the relevant cohort. We have the potential to use Mastery Outcomes in a differentiated way.
An early issue was that DA's were not originally reflected in our SIS (students were seen as Degree students plus), and we constantly battle to make sure module and course cohorts are appropriately differentiated in the SIS.
We handle DA tracking requirements (Off the Job Hours, KSB tracking, Three Way Reviews etc) through formal zero credit modules which give those requirements and their achievement or non achievement a presence in the SIS (rather than sitting in external spreadsheets) and students can be both tracked and nudged by study skills coaches. These sit in persistent crosslists (one per course) separate to the academic modules.
- Importantly the ZCMs must be completed before the apprenticeship can be awarded, otherwise a student could walk away with a degree without completing the standards, leaving us with a financial deficit. The ZCMs make completion visible to Academic Registry.
Things are improving in terms of ease of management as the UK standards drift towards becoming fully integrated with their host degrees, completion of the module in the future = completion of the DA KSBs.
- If I was seeking improvement it would be to have Canvas preload the DA Standards in the same way that state standards are loaded in the US.
However the challenge there is that IFATE are only just digitising the standards properly (I'm sure you've had to screen scrape these from pdfs) and we will be running out unstructured standards for some years. Last time I checked IFATE hadn't published their standards database. Additionally the apprenticeship standards are non-standard in how they have been set up, which makes it difficult to treat them effectively as a database or to feed an LMS, so IFATE standards would need to be both rationalised, and truncated to be able to fit the Canvas Mastery Outcomes, which is where they need to belong. (There is scope to improve outcomes management, and there has been discussion of this alongside recent rubric management updates).
In terms of perceived responsiveness from Canvas to local markets and specific institutional needs, that is the compromise all institutions make when choosing a global SaaS provider. The larger proportion of Instructure's business is in US K12 education and IMHO we all get the benefit of their economies of scale. Universities are a smaller proportion of their market, and European (and UK institutions) a fraction of that - That said they remain the market leader and have not lost a North American HEI client yet.
DA's are a further fragment of that global provision, and I would argue are too new for UK institutions be able to speak with a shared understanding and voice. A major failure of DA design was to take account of the data, LMS, and HEI Academic Regulatory implications prior to launch, and both the Education and Skills Funding Agency and OFSTED are filling in the gaps on an institutional basis so we are building on shifting sands. HEBR noted preDAs the challenges with dealing with Public Recognition Bodies, and if anything DA's have amplified that.
If you want to get Canvas to support DA focussed development IMHO you need to be working through the UK HE Canvas User Group, which has been able to get some UK needs raised up the agenda. In particular the User Group has the potential to share experience and isight to develop some common archetypes or schemas - and it may be possible to develop these alongside and integrated with Canvas, rather than requiring Instructure to change Canvas.
One final note is that whilst DAs are a UK product (although there are European models) competency based education is widely used in US and Australia, and we ought to be able to learn from their existing experience.
PM me if you want a detailed chat - bear in mind that across our four faculties we are ourselves still working towards a unified DA approach in SIS and LMS...