Anonymous Discussion Forums

This idea has been developed and deployed to Canvas

Idea:

Instructors can create discussions that allow for posts to be made anonymously

 

Use Cases:

As an instructor, I want to create discussions in which participation is anonymous. This would free my students to share their thoughts without worrying about judgement / criticism by their peers or me. They'd take risks they might not otherwise.


transferred from the old Community

Originally posted by: Lynn McCarty
Thank you especially for contributions by: Rob Ditto, Allison Pyle, Renee Carney, Robert Jones

151 Comments
Renee_Carney
Community Team
Community Team

The Radar idea stage has been removed from the Feature Idea Process.  You can read more about why in the blog post Adaptation: Feature Idea Process Changes.

 

This change will only impact the stage sort of this idea and will not change how it is voted on or how it is considered during prioritization activities.  This change will streamline the list of ideas 'open for voting', making it easier for you to see the true top voted ideas in one sort, here.

mikeg
Community Participant

I find it a bit mind boggling that such a simple and straightforward feature has not been implemented.  As a result, I am forced to use a third party discussion board.

aaron_bahmer
Community Contributor

Saddened that three years of positive voting and comments has yielded nothing. Indeed, please implement this.

kewilliams1
Community Novice

This would be a useful feature. At my school professors are split between email and canvas discussions. People tend to choose email when they are worried about asking a "stupid question". Anonymous discussions would help resolve this. 

michellee_there
Community Novice

An anonymous posting feature would help in the classroom significantly.  In elective classrooms where students skill levels very from special needs to IB / AP accelerated learners I am hesitant to create forums where students might be hesitant to post due to comparison.  I can create groups for students of like skill/ language level/ mastery to comment in, but that limits peer teaching.  It would be helpful to have feature which allowed me to see the comments and replies in the speed grader format so that proper assessment of understandings can take place with out student/ peer fears of posting.

mabrams
Community Explorer

It's great that this feature has been on the "radar" for the last two years.  However, I find myself frustrated.  There are three or four reasons for feeling frustrated.   The first reason is Canvas is an educational tool, so I feel that the team should be thinking about pedagogy before the users even complain.  An anonymous discussion option just seems obviously useful.  The second is a point I've expressed elsewhere before:  Whether a feature is eventually added should not depend on a scientifically invalid survey method (voting in this forum) which requires too much effort from busy users.  I know that the forum is not the only method that you use for gauging the validity of a  modification, but it's the only method of communication that we are given.  (For example, help desk personnel refuse to take suggestions and pass them on.)  The third reason is that I think that apart from the obvious usefulness of anonymous forums, to the extent that the proposal's value is gauged by what happens in this forum, the rationale for allowing anonymous forums has been and continues to be clear, not only because of the number of votes and comments, but because some of the uses described in some of the comments.  The fourth reason for frustration is a bit different. I understand that you have a lot of requests for changes, and that you have other changes you might want to make, and that Canvas is a complicated software product.  Because it's complicated, you have to be careful about making changes so that you don't inadvertently introduce a new problem.  I don't know your code, obviously--but I do have professional programming experience.  It seems to me that if the code was designed well in the first place, I don't see why adding anonymity to forums would require an inordinate amount of work.  It might not be trivial, but I wouldn't think it would be that hard.  I don't think your code is likely to be poorly designed, either, because given the complexity of what the product does, it's likely that would have had serious problems over and over again in the past if it were.  I'm not aware of such problems!  So I think the code is well designed.  This is all speculative on my part, obviously but if I'm right, the point is this: If a feature is clearly a good thing to add, and it's not that hard to add, it seems like it should be an easy decision to prioritize it.  Thanks. -Marshall

gwitmer
Community Novice

Let me just add some comments on why this would be very valuable indeed to my own courses -- including face-to-face courses that have a Canvas site as additional support.

Even at a school with undergraduates who have exceptional background knowledge and skills, there is one area in which many, many students are extremely weak, namely, writing skills. In my experience, one of the best things one can do to improve student writing is to force them to do frequent writing that isn't itself graded (so, the stakes are low) but where their writing may be presented (in an anonymous form) to the entire class for critical review. I do this with or without Canvas, but the logistics of this would be greatly eased if anonymous posting were enabled. Just imagine requiring all students to write a response to a prompt that is then posted anonymously on one of those forums and then the instructor can select some for such critical examination in view of the entire class -- whether that critical examination is in person with the posts projected on the screen for everyone to see or that examination is done online with the instructor commenting (perhaps in writing, perhaps in audio recording) for all to see. Getting the other students in on the act is wonderful if you can get them to do it. So long as the instructor can track who actually posted what, that would be a fantastic tool.

I know nothing about the practicalities of site design, but I find it hard to believe that there couldn't be some relatively straightforward way to enable this feature. Maybe posting requires an associated name? Well, then let students be assigned pseudonyms for each post; surely some function can auto-generate such fake names for each student for each assigned discussion board.

Anyway, I think the considerable benefits of this feature make it imperative that it be developed. So we should keep pestering the Canvas Powers That Be.

am_jagusztyn
Community Novice

My university would really enjoy this for discussion reflections.

galit_stam1
Community Novice

Yes! This!  I've been using Padlet for this purpose, but it would save time and energy to have this great feature of anonymity directly in Canvas (without having to embed)!  Anonymity allows students to ask "embarrassing" questions without shame!  

rislis
Community Champion

galit.stam‌ - Great idea about embedding a Padlet!  I still wish the anonymous discussion option was available.