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In this video, you will learn how to view, reply to, and edit discussion posts.
Last updated 2023-06-01
View the script for this video
To view subtitles for this video, click the button in the toolbar and select a language.
Video overviews reflect current feature functionality in Canvas; they are updated based on workflow changes, not on minor or non-functional interface enhancements. Depending on your institution's Canvas theme, the Canvas interface may display differently than shown in this video, but the functionality is the same.
Discussion Overview (Students) Video Script
In this video, you will learn how to view, reply to, and edit discussion posts. To get started, click the Discussions link in Course Navigation. From the Discussions Index page, you can view all discussions in your course, filter discussions to view all or unread discussions, search for a specific discussion by title or keyword, and, if enabled by your instructor, you can start a new discussion.
By default, when you view a discussion, unread replies are automatically marked as read when you scroll past them. You can manage this option by clicking the Settings icon. Select the Manually mark posts as read checkbox to keep track of which posts still need review when you view a discussion, Click the Save Settings button when you are done.
The Discussions Index page is organized into three areas: Pinned Discussions, Discussions, and Closed for Comments. The Pinned section displays a list of discussions that your instructor wants to show at the top of your Discussions page. The Discussions section displays a list of current discussions with most recently active listed first. The Closed for Comments section displays a list of discussions with expired availability dates and discussions that have been manually closed.
Graded discussions display the assignment icon, and discussions that require a peer review display the peer review icon. Dates display for graded discussions, and for discussions with assigned to-do dates. Click the subscribe icon to subscribe or unsubscribe to a discussion. You can also view the number of unread and total replies in a discussion.
Thanks for watching this Discussions Overview video. To learn more about Canvas, ask questions, or engage with other Canvas users, please visit community.canvaslms.com.
In this video, you will learn about the Discussions Index page and discussion creation.
Last updated 2023-06-02
View the script for this video
To view subtitles for this video, click the button in the toolbar.
Video overviews reflect current feature functionality in Canvas; they are updated based on workflow changes, not on minor or non-functional interface enhancements. Depending on your institution's Canvas theme, the Canvas interface may display differently than shown in this video, but the functionality is the same.
To learn more about discussions, visit the following lessons:
Discussions Overview (Instructors) Video Script
In this video, you will learn about the Discussions Index page and discussion creation. To view the Discussions Index page, click the Discussions link in Course Navigation. From the Discussions Index page, you can view a list of all discussions in your course, filter the list of discussions to view all or unread discussions, search for a specific discussion by title or keyword, and start a new discussion. You can also manage settings for all discussions in your course by clicking the Settings icon.
When you view a discussion, unread replies are automatically marked as read when you scroll past them. To help you keep track of which posts still need review when you view a discussion, select the Manually mark posts as read checkbox. To allow students to begin a new discussion, select the Create discussion topics checkbox. To allow students to edit and delete their own posts, select the Edit and delete their own posts checkbox. To allow students to attach pictures or documents to a discussion post, select the Attach files to discussions checkbox. Click the Save Settings button when you are done.
The Discussions Index page is organized into three areas: Pinned Discussions, Discussions, and Closed for Comments. The Pinned section displays a list of discussions that show at the top of a student’s Discussions page. The Discussions section displays a list of current discussions with most recently active listed first. The Closed for Comments section displays a list of discussions with expired availability dates and discussions that have been manually closed. To move a discussion from one section, or to organize discussions in the Pinned Discussion section, drag and drop it to the preferred location. Click a discussion’s options icon to open or close commenting, pin or unpin, duplicate, send the discussion to another instructor, copy the discussion to another course, or delete a discussion.
You can also view at-a-glance information for individual discussions. Graded discussions display the assignment icon, and discussions that require a peer review display the peer review icon. Dates display for graded discussions, and for discussions with assigned to-do dates. Publish icons indicate the publish status of a discussion. Click the subscribe icon to subscribe or unsubscribe to a discussion. You can also view the number of unread and total replies in a discussion.
To create a new discussion, click the Add Discussion button. From the discussion details page, give your discussion a title in the Topic Title field and add directions, media, and other instructional content using the Rich Content Editor. To assign an ungraded discussion to a specific section in your course, click the Post to drop-down menu and type the name of or select a section name from the options that appear. Add an attachment to your discussion by clicking the Choose File button and selecting a file from your computer. Select other discussion format options in the Options menu and create a group discussion by selecting the This is a Group Discussion checkbox. You can create a graded discussion by selecting the Graded checkbox in the Options menu. Next, enter the discussion point value in the Points field, and specify how the grade displays in the gradebook in the Display Grade As drop-down menu. Then select an assignment group from the Assignment Group drop-down menu. You can also specify peer review requirements for your discussion. Assign a due date as well as availability dates for the discussion. You can also assign the discussion to specific sections and students, or differentiate due dates for sections and students within your course. Click the Add button and in the Assign to field, type or select the section or student name. Then add due and availability dates. To save your discussion as a draft, click the Save button or, to save changes and make the discussion available to students, click the Save & Publish button. After you save your discussion you can view the discussion details page.
In the discussion details page, you can publish or unpublish the discussion, edit the discussion, view discussion options, search and filter discussion replies, collapse and expand discussion replies, subscribe or unsubscribe, and reply to the discussion.
Thanks for watching this Discussions overview video. To learn more about Canvas, ask questions, or engage with other Canvas users, please visit community.canvaslms.com.
Canvas provides an integrated system for class discussions, allowing both instructors and students to start and contribute to as many discussion topics as desired. Discussions allows for interactive communication between two or more people; users can participate in a conversation with an entire class or group.
Discussions can also be created as an assignment for grading purposes (and seamlessly integrated with the Canvas Gradebook), or simply serve as a forum for topical and current events. Discussions can also be created within student groups.
Discussion topics can be organized as focused or threaded discussions. Focused discussions only allow for two levels of nesting, the original post and subsequent replies. Threaded discussions allow for infinite levels of nesting. Focused discussions are relatively short-lived interactions, while threaded discussions allow replies within replies and may last for a longer period of time.
Focused Discussions
Focused discussions are relatively short-lived interactions that tend to disappear as the course progresses, such as a weekly forum for questions related to that week's activities.
Use a focused discussion for single posts and related comments. One discussion leader typically posts a message and multiple learners comment on it. Participants may leave a side comment to a reply, but cannot develop the conversation beyond two layers of nesting.
Focused discussions might also be used to:
- Answer a single question.
- Share resources amongst peers.
- Collect results from a simple research activity.
- Share solutions to a single problem.
- Correct misconceptions.
- Clarify course policies.
- Get feedback on a work in progress.
- Share insights about a single reading.
Threaded discussions
Threaded discussions include infinite layers of response nesting, allowing commenters to continue responding on a single nested thread. Threaded discussions lend themselves to the refining of complex ideas. Responses and different lines of inquiry can be quickly navigated due to its hierarchical structure. Threaded discussions may be long-standing spaces for thoughts that persist throughout an entire course.
Use a threaded discussion for multiple posts and related comments. One or more discussion leaders post a message and multiple learners comment on it with the freedom to create any number of related discussion topics and comments.
Threaded Discussions might also be used to:
- Post and answer multiple related or unrelated questions.
- Organize results from a complex research activity.
- Share and iterate upon ideas shared by each student in the course.
- Debate the pros and cons of a single issue or multiple issues.
- Ask multiple questions of a single discussion leader.
- Refine ideas between multiple discussion leaders and multiple learners.
- Facilitate group discussions around multiple topics.
- Facilitate discussions around a discussion (fishbowl conversations).
- Explore at length the feasibility of different solutions to a complex problem.
How do I use Discussions as an Instructor?
Within Discussions you can:
- Create, edit, and delete discussion topics. You can also reply to, edit, and delete individual student discussion posts.
- Create threaded or focused discussions within your course. (Private discussions can be initiated within student groups, which are not viewable by others outside that group.)
- Create discussions with varied due dates for different sections within your course.
- Create a group discussion as an assignment.
- Create a graded discussion for everyone, individual students, course sections, or course groups. When a discussion is marked as a graded assignment, the Canvas SpeedGrader™ isolates each student’s comments from the thread and combines them into one easily readable view for grading.
- Subscribe to a discussion and be notified of replies.
- Enable podcast feeds within your discussions.
- Embed or attach files, images, and YouTube videos.
- Add course content directly from your course.
- Delay discussion posts until a defined date.
- Pin discussion threads that you want your students to see at the top of the Discussions page.
Notes:
- You can learn more about using Discussions as an instructor.
- You can also use keyboard shortcuts to navigate individual discussion threads. To view a window with a list of keyboard navigation shortcuts, press Alt+F8 (on a PC keyboard) or Option+F8 (on a Mac keyboard) simultaneously on your keyboard.
What settings can I control in Discussions?
If you are an instructor, you can control certain settings within Discussions:
- Tell Canvas how to mark your discussion posts as read and unread. You can also manually mark posts as read.
- Require students to reply to a discussion before viewing other replies.
- Allow students to edit or delete their own discussion posts.
- Allow students to create new discussions and attach files in your course discussions (this setting does not apply to student groups).
- Allow students to like discussion replies in your course discussions.
- Close discussion threads to comments.
- Allow or disallow threaded replies.
How do I use Discussions as a Student?
Within Discussions, you can:
- Create, edit, and delete discussion topics.
- Reply to individual student replies, unless your instructor has disallowed threaded replies.
- Subscribe to a discussion and be notified of replies.
- Subscribe to podcast feeds within discussions.
- Embed or attach files, images, and YouTube videos.
Notes:
- Your instructor may have some of the above options disabled in your course.
- You can learn more about using Discussions as a student.
How do I use Discussions as an Observer?
Within Discussions, you can:
- View your student's course discussions.
- Filter your student's course discussions.
- Subscribe to a discussion and be notified of replies.
Notes:
- Your student's teacher may have some of the above options disabled in your student's course.
- You can learn more about using Discussions as a parent/observer.
Summary
Discussion Summarization uses a Generative AI model to provide instructors summaries of key points, questions, and ideas in a discussion thread.
This feature is designed to save educators time and to allow discussions to be used effectively in large-format classes and other environments where they were previously infeasible.
Availability
Release Schedule |
Coming soon! View updates via the change log in the Discussion Summaries User Group. |
Affected User Roles |
Admin, Instructor |
Affects User Interface |
Yes |
Related Feature Enhancement Ideas |
Please post ideas to the Discussion Summaries user group, which is coming soon! |
Upcoming Enhancements |
N/A |
Mobile App Support |
Not yet available |
Beta Environment Availability |
2024-07-20 |
Production Environment Availability |
2024-07-17 |
Free-for-Teacher Availability |
TBD |
Enforcement Date |
Will remain a feature option |
Configuration
Feature Option Location & Default Status |
Account (Disabled/Locked) |
Feature Option State |
Feature Preview (collecting user feedback) |
Enabled by Canvas Admin |
|
Subaccount Configuration |
Yes |
Related Feature Options |
Discussion Summary |
Affected Canvas Areas |
Discussions |
Advisories |
|
Permissions |
Inherent to user role (Instructor or admin required) |
APIs |
Not supported |
Account and Course Setup
Feature Option
At the Account-level, admins must enable the Discussion Summary feature option. Once enabled, a Summarize button displays for instructors on the Discussions page.
Course-Level Features
When the Discussion Summary feature option is enabled, discussion threads have a “Summarize” button that will use generative AI to generate a summary of key points and questions in the thread. Once generated, summaries may be refined by passing a description of desired outputs (e.g. “concerns about grading policy”), or be regenerated. These summaries are only available to instructors and administrators.
To summarize discussion threads, click the Summarize button.
Enter the desired area or topic to summarize.
To generate a summary, click the Generate Summary button [1]. To exit the discussion summary, click the Disable Summary button [2].
A summary is created based on the topics the instructor asked about.
In this video, you will learn about the Discussions Index page and discussion creation.
Last updated 2023-06-02
View the script for this video
To view subtitles for this video, click the button in the toolbar.
Video overviews reflect current feature functionality in Canvas; they are updated based on workflow changes, not on minor or non-functional interface enhancements. Depending on your institution's Canvas theme, the Canvas interface may display differently than shown in this video, but the functionality is the same.
To learn more about discussions, visit the following lessons:
Discussions Overview (Instructors) Video Script
In this video, you will learn about the Discussions Index page and discussion creation. To view the Discussions Index page, click the Discussions link in Course Navigation. From the Discussions Index page, you can view a list of all discussions in your course, filter the list of discussions to view all or unread discussions, search for a specific discussion by title or keyword, and start a new discussion. You can also manage settings for all discussions in your course by clicking the Settings icon.
When you view a discussion, unread replies are automatically marked as read when you scroll past them. To help you keep track of which posts still need review when you view a discussion, select the Manually mark posts as read checkbox. To allow students to begin a new discussion, select the Create discussion topics checkbox. To allow students to edit and delete their own posts, select the Edit and delete their own posts checkbox. To allow students to attach pictures or documents to a discussion post, select the Attach files to discussions checkbox. Click the Save Settings button when you are done.
The Discussions Index page is organized into three areas: Pinned Discussions, Discussions, and Closed for Comments. The Pinned section displays a list of discussions that show at the top of a student’s Discussions page. The Discussions section displays a list of current discussions with most recently active listed first. The Closed for Comments section displays a list of discussions with expired availability dates and discussions that have been manually closed. To move a discussion from one section, or to organize discussions in the Pinned Discussion section, drag and drop it to the preferred location. Click a discussion’s options icon to open or close commenting, pin or unpin, duplicate, send the discussion to another instructor, copy the discussion to another course, or delete a discussion.
You can also view at-a-glance information for individual discussions. Graded discussions display the assignment icon, and discussions that require a peer review display the peer review icon. Dates display for graded discussions, and for discussions with assigned to-do dates. Publish icons indicate the publish status of a discussion. Click the subscribe icon to subscribe or unsubscribe to a discussion. You can also view the number of unread and total replies in a discussion.
To create a new discussion, click the Add Discussion button. From the discussion details page, give your discussion a title in the Topic Title field and add directions, media, and other instructional content using the Rich Content Editor. To assign an ungraded discussion to a specific section in your course, click the Post to drop-down menu and type the name of or select a section name from the options that appear. Add an attachment to your discussion by clicking the Choose File button and selecting a file from your computer. Select other discussion format options in the Options menu and create a group discussion by selecting the This is a Group Discussion checkbox. You can create a graded discussion by selecting the Graded checkbox in the Options menu. Next, enter the discussion point value in the Points field, and specify how the grade displays in the gradebook in the Display Grade As drop-down menu. Then select an assignment group from the Assignment Group drop-down menu. You can also specify peer review requirements for your discussion. Assign a due date as well as availability dates for the discussion. You can also assign the discussion to specific sections and students, or differentiate due dates for sections and students within your course. Click the Add button and in the Assign to field, type or select the section or student name. Then add due and availability dates. To save your discussion as a draft, click the Save button or, to save changes and make the discussion available to students, click the Save & Publish button. After you save your discussion you can view the discussion details page.
In the discussion details page, you can publish or unpublish the discussion, edit the discussion, view discussion options, search and filter discussion replies, collapse and expand discussion replies, subscribe or unsubscribe, and reply to the discussion.
Thanks for watching this Discussions overview video. To learn more about Canvas, ask questions, or engage with other Canvas users, please visit community.canvaslms.com.
The Canvas Discussions redesign offers many exciting opportunities to bolster collaboration through many modern, flexible discussion features. This redesign takes some of the impactful legacy functionality and gives it a modern UI, improved peer-to-peer interaction, and more robust moderation tools for instructors.
For an accessible version of the AI nutrition facts, please download the attached PDF.
In this video, you will learn how to view, reply to, and edit discussion posts.
Last updated 2023-06-01
View the script for this video
To view subtitles for this video, click the button in the toolbar and select a language.
Video overviews reflect current feature functionality in Canvas; they are updated based on workflow changes, not on minor or non-functional interface enhancements. Depending on your institution's Canvas theme, the Canvas interface may display differently than shown in this video, but the functionality is the same.
Discussion Overview (Students) Video Script
In this video, you will learn how to view, reply to, and edit discussion posts. To get started, click the Discussions link in Course Navigation. From the Discussions Index page, you can view all discussions in your course, filter discussions to view all or unread discussions, search for a specific discussion by title or keyword, and, if enabled by your instructor, you can start a new discussion.
By default, when you view a discussion, unread replies are automatically marked as read when you scroll past them. You can manage this option by clicking the Settings icon. Select the Manually mark posts as read checkbox to keep track of which posts still need review when you view a discussion, Click the Save Settings button when you are done.
The Discussions Index page is organized into three areas: Pinned Discussions, Discussions, and Closed for Comments. The Pinned section displays a list of discussions that your instructor wants to show at the top of your Discussions page. The Discussions section displays a list of current discussions with most recently active listed first. The Closed for Comments section displays a list of discussions with expired availability dates and discussions that have been manually closed.
Graded discussions display the assignment icon, and discussions that require a peer review display the peer review icon. Dates display for graded discussions, and for discussions with assigned to-do dates. Click the subscribe icon to subscribe or unsubscribe to a discussion. You can also view the number of unread and total replies in a discussion.
Thanks for watching this Discussions Overview video. To learn more about Canvas, ask questions, or engage with other Canvas users, please visit community.canvaslms.com.
This one-page overview provides a summary of Discussion Summaries in Canvas.
This behavior has been resolved and deployed to the production environment as of 9/25/24.
Description
If a discussion has differentiated due dates for a user or section, those dates are not respected and a discussion will appear closed for comments according to the dates given to “everyone/everyone else”.
Expected Behavior
If there are differentiated due dates, they should be respected and the students with those dates should be able to access and reply to discussions.
Workaround
No workaround exists at this time.
Steps to Reproduce
-
Create a course with at least two students
-
Create a discussion and within the settings create an additional “assign to” section
-
For the everyone section, place the due date in the past
-
For the individual user place the due date in the future
-
Act as the individual user with the due date in the future, notice the discussion is closed for comments
Additional Info
VICE-4639
Known issues indicate notable behaviors that have been escalated to the Canvas engineering team. Known issues are not a guarantee for an immediate resolution. This document is for informational purposes only and does not replace the Support process. If you are encountering the behavior outlined in this document, please ensure you have submitted a Support case (per your institution's escalation process) so Canvas Support can adequately gauge the overall customer impact and prioritize appropriately.
- Tags:
- 2024-09-25
- VICE-4639
This behavior has been resolved and deployed to the production environment as of 8/28/24.
Description
Students are unable to reply to discussions that should be open, as it gives them a “This topic is closed for comments” error. This is currently present in multiple institutions.
Expected Behavior
They should be able to reply to the discussion, as its still available.
Workaround
No workaround exists at this time.
Steps to Reproduce
No steps to reproduce exist at this time.
Additional Info
VICE-4515
Known issues indicate notable behaviors that have been escalated to the Canvas engineering team. Known issues are not a guarantee for an immediate resolution. This document is for informational purposes only and does not replace the Support process. If you are encountering the behavior outlined in this document, please ensure you have submitted a Support case (per your institution's escalation process) so Canvas Support can adequately gauge the overall customer impact and prioritize appropriately.
- Tags:
- 2024-08-28
- VICE-4515
This document (last updated 2024-05-17) provides a summary of the Discussions/Announcements Redesign feature, which was originally introduced in the Canvas Release Notes (2021-06-19). For specific release updates within this document, please see the releases change log.
Discussion and announcement topics display an updated design with small usability enhancements. These changes ensure page responsiveness and prepare the interface for feature functionality improvements.
- Community Resources
- Feature Releases
- Customer Feedback
- Feature Documentation
- Feature/Integration Setup
- Feature Preview
- Active Development
- Permissions
- Mobile Support
- Release Schedule
- Course-Level Features
- Interface Modifications
- Feature Parity
- Additional Functionality
- Role Labels
- Flexible Viewing Options
- Mentions
- Quotes
- Reply Reporting
- Reported Reply Notifications (Teachers)
- Anonymous Discussions
Community Resources
Feature Releases
This document outlines up-to-date functionality for this feature. This document will continue to receive additional updates as indicated in the feature's release change log. Releases are subject to change.
Customer Feedback
Community feedback for the Discussions/Announcements Redesign project is welcome in the Discussions/Announcements Redesign User Group Forum.
Feature Documentation
New documentation for this feature is available in the Canvas Guides:
- Announcements Redesign
- Discussions Redesign
Comments are welcome for functionality clarification. Lessons will also be updated with all future enhancements as indicated in the change log.
Feature/Integration Setup
Feature Preview
The Discussions/Announcements Redesign project involves the Discussions/Announcements Redesign feature preview, which can be allowed on a course-by-course basis or turned on for all courses across the entire account. By default, this feature preview is set to Off. Canvas admins can manage this feature preview in Account Settings.
By default, this feature preview is set to Off and Unlocked, which means it is visible at the course level but is not turned on. Institutions who prefer that this preview not display at the course level should lock the feature preview at the account level in Account Settings.
Active Development
This feature enhances the Canvas experience within Discussions. When this preview is enabled in a course, early access to ongoing improvements will be displayed automatically with every release. Customers who choose to enable this feature in the production environment should subscribe to this document and the Discussions/Announcements Redesign User Group to stay current with upcoming features and their release dates.
This feature preview will be enforced for all users in production on July 20th, 2024. At that time the default discussion and announcement experience will be that of the redesign and users will no longer be able to use the legacy experience.
Permissions
Permissions for Discussions are outlined in the Canvas Account Role Permissions resource document and the Canvas Course Role Permissions resource document.
For users to be able to mention other users in discussion replies, the permission Conversations - send messages to individual course members needs to be enabled.
The Discussions/Announcements Redesign project currently uses the same permissions as classic Discussions and Announcements. Any changes to permissions and this project will be updated in this document.
Mobile Support
This feature is available in the Canvas Mobile apps.
Release Schedule
This feature is currently available in the beta and production environments as a feature preview.
On July 20th, 2024 this feature will be enabled for all users on production and will become the default experience for all users. We will follow our standard release process with this change being enforced on beta one month prior on June 17th, 2024.
Additional details will be announced in Upcoming Canvas Changes or the Release Notes when available.
Course-Level Features
Interface Modifications
For individual discussion and announcement topics, the interface has been expanded for maximum space and ensure responsive views.
The following modifications have been made to individual topics:
- The toolbar has been moved to the top of the discussion and announcement thread.
- Newest replies display at the top of the first page instead of the bottom of the last page.
- Users can sort replies from newest to oldest, or oldest to newest.
- Users can also quickly move to the top of the discussion or announcement at any time.
Feature Parity
The following functionality has been included for parity with classic Discussions:
- Users must post before seeing replies
- Reply posts can be marked as read or unread
- Discussion time stamp edit display
- Multiple Due Dates (addition: individual student names are displayed instead of the total number of students)
- Available From and Until Dates
- Previous/Next buttons for Modules
- Group Discussions
- Peer Review
- Add to student to-do list
The following functionality has been included for parity with classic Announcements:
- Users must post before seeing replies
- Reply posts can be marked as read or unread
- Announcement time stamp edit display
- Announcement delay post alert (teachers/instructors)
Additional parity features will be added in future releases.
Additional Functionality
Role Labels
Discussion and announcement threads display a label for users with TA roles and Teacher (Instructor) roles. This feature helps students more quickly identify users with instructor-based roles in the course.
Threads also include a label indicating the discussion or announcement author.
Flexible Viewing Options
When a reply includes additional replies, the number of replies is displayed, as well as the number of unread replies (specific to the user viewing the reply). Users can choose to view these replies inline or in a split view.
Inline View
Split View
Mentions
Users can mention other users in discussion replies by using the @ symbol. All available users in the course display in the drop-down menu.
Note: For users to be able to mention other users in discussion replies, the permission Conversations - send messages to individual course members needs to be enabled.
If they are mentioned, users with the Discussions - New Mention notification enabled will receive notifications.
Quotes
Users can quote other replies as part of their discussion reply.
Reply Reporting
Within individual discussions, replies can be reported by students and teachers. Reply replies can be enabled or disabled in the Discussions Settings menu.
When enabled, all users can report replies by clicking the Settings menu for the reply and clicking the Report link.
When a reply is reported by a user, the user must indicate why the reply is being reported (inappropriate, offensive and/or abusive, or Other). Reporting a reply cannot be undone.
Once a user reports a reply, the Settings menu option displays to that user as Reported. That user cannot report the reply again, but other users can still report the reply.
Reported Reply Notifications (Teachers)
To be notified of reported replies, teachers can adjust the Discussions Reported Reply notification when accessing course-level notifications from inside a course. If you select a course and then go to View Course Notifications on the Home page, the option will be there. Email notifications include a direct link to the reply that has been reported.
Reporting a reply does not hide the reply; all replies are still visible to all users. However, teachers can choose to edit or delete the reported reply.
Note: Once a reply is reported, it always displays as Reported and cannot be cleared by teachers.
Anonymous Discussions
Discussions allow teachers to create anonymous discussions. This option displays when creating a new discussion for a course. By default this option is set to off.
When anonymity is turned on for a discussion, grading and groups are not supported.
When the Discussion Settings menu option is selected for students to create discussions, the option is also included to allow students to create anonymous discussions. This option is not selected by default.
When an anonymous discussion exists in the course, the Discussions page indicates anonymous discussions before a student opens the discussion.
Users with a teacher, TA, or designer role in the course will never be anonymous. However, student names and profile pictures are hidden from other course members, including teachers. Admins who are not explicitly enrolled as a teacher, TA, or designer and create a reply also display as anonymous. Additionally, users who view a course without having a course enrollment (such as when participating in a public course) also display as anonymous.
Anonymous discussion posts include the standard settings options, including reporting replies.
When an observer views a fully anonymous discussion, the text now displays This is an anonymous Discussion. Student names and profile pictures are hidden. When an observer views a partially anonymous discussion, the text now displays Students have the option to reply anonymously. Some names and profile pictures may be hidden.
- Tags:
- 2021-06-19