New In-Product Training

The content in this blog is over six months old, and the comments are closed. For the most recent product updates and discussions, you're encouraged to explore newer posts from Instructure's Product Managers.

jsailor
Instructure
Instructure
4
2048

As the COVID-19 pandemic spread across the globe, announcements were made that school buildings would be closed and that teaching and learning would be done remotely from the homes of teachers and students through online platforms. In a perfect world, educators would be provided professional development and time to familiarize themselves with the tech tools to be used in delivering instruction. Students would also be taught how to access curriculum and submit course work in those same platforms. But, we're not living in a perfect world. Not even close. And, let's face it, we never will be. 

 

While administrators, coaches, and facilitators rushed to get teachers trained on Canvas and instructional designers worked to create templates and blueprint courses, we at Instructure got to work updating features that help our new users to access in-product training and scaffold their learning of Canvas in order to ensure a higher level of success in using the platform. We've known that these in-product training and supports have been needed and that they will continue to be valuable to our users, but this unprecedented time  pushed these initiatives to the top of the priority list. 

 

In an effort to better understand our users' needs, we analyzed support data and feedback from our CSMs to determine specific areas that could use additional support. Given this information, we've updated the help menu to make it easier for users to find needed links. We've also created tour points that orient users to the global navigation. And, for instructors new to Canvas, we've updated our New User Tutorial.

 

The New User Tutorial is available to all instructors and provides a tutorial tray for each of the index pages found in the course navigation. Information about this feature can be found in How do I use the Canvas course setup tutorial as an instructor? When enabled, a tray opens that includes a detailed description of what the feature is, a call to action for the teacher, and relevant links to our guides and help articles to help the new user get started.

 

Administrators can enable this feature at the account level by turning on the New User Tutorial feature option. Teachers can collapse the trays or even dismiss the tutorial once they feel confident in their use of Canvas. If, at a later time, a teacher would like to turn it back on, they can reenable it from their user setting under feature options as long as it is still enabled at the account level. 

 

At Instructure, we are proud to support teachers who are on the front lines in education during this pandemic. We applaud educators around the globe for the outstanding work being done to keep students learning and to stay connected during these difficult and unsure times. Thank you!

The content in this blog is over six months old, and the comments are closed. For the most recent product updates and discussions, you're encouraged to explore newer posts from Instructure's Product Managers.

4 Comments
phanley
Community Contributor

Can content for the tutorial tray be customized in any way? I just noticed the Zoom LTI has its own tutorial tray, but I can't tell if Zoom added that through the integration or if that is something that has to be done on the Instructure side 

The ability to change (or even just [pre|a]ppend content to those, or even the ability to set them just for home grown external tools would be great (there's an idea post already for the capability)

jsailor
Instructure
Instructure

Hi Peter, 

The ability to customize the tutorial trays is not currently available nor is it on our roadmap; however, I've shared the link to the idea you shared with our product manager and team that now owns this functionality. 

Zoom was added by the Canvas team during the initial Covid response this past spring as nearly every school moved to online instruction and/or remote learning. With the influx of instructors needing the capability to use a conferencing tool, many turned to Zoom, which led to a heightened number of support requests for help in getting started with Zoom specifically. With the added tutorial tray content, instructors had the information at their finger tips when and didn't have to wait for a response. 

phanley
Community Contributor

Thanks for letting me know!

BarryBEATTIE
Community Participant

it may be worth looking at the granularity of this feature.

For example, the context help side panel that appears after the Zoom LTI is installed points to the Canvas Admin blog on Zoom.

The help in the blog points to Zoom LTI 1.1, but we have Zoom Pro LTI 1.3, so that blog help actually becomes a hinderance. The content in the Admin Blog is still accurate for some users, but not for our situation.

We are a large organisation with support infrastructure like help desk and trainers for teachers. Our only option is to turn off this setting for every course, but unfortunately, this robs us of when it can be useful.

The fundamental point is providing _accurate_ information for Teachers to reduce confusion.