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Hi everyone!
I'm struggling with the Canvas Padlet Assignment.
I can:
- Create a single Padlet Assignment, in which all users enrolled in Canvas can contribute
- Create a Padlet Assignment per user, in which each user gets a blank template Padlet to complete, this is what I'd like to set up for the academic's course since they want each student to create a Timeline for a history subject.
However, when the user has added to the Padlet there is no way to Submit the assignment.
Am I missing a step in the setup?
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assignment
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LTI
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Padlet
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I see that this is an older post. I have used Padlets with the whole class adding to one Padlet. The Padlet is e...
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Hi! There is an LTI for Padlet but other than that, to give each student their own Padlet I would have s...
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...o find). We're working on setting up Padlet integration right now, and our Padlet rep has told us that grade passback i...
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We subscribe to backpack and I've tested the LTI, but honestly it's just better in my case to embed Padlets onto C...
I am doing some analysis pertaining to Canvas DB Vs Padlet and trying to figure out if it is worth going ahead with another tool just for ease of use or there are some strong points setting Padlet apart from Canvas DB. Anyone who has worked on this or can share any information would be of great help.
Thanks in advance!
Hi, I have been successfully embedding Padlets in Canvas pages for my students to use for the past 5 years. After have just re-made Padlet form last year, with the same settings and embedded it in Canvas it shows up with the error message:
"This padlet is not publicly viewable
Please open the embedded padlet in a new tab to access it. Change the privacy setting to 'secret', 'public' or 'org-wide' if you would like the padlet to be viewable here."
This is despite the Padlet settings already being set to 'org-wide' and made within my university's approved Padlet Domain.
Any ideas why it's started doing that this year and what I need to do to fix it?
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Instructor
Hi All!
I have created a Shelf-type Padlet on the Padlet site. It seems to work fine. But if I embed it into a Canvas page, it seems to work only up until the point where the page reloads. Once that happens, I can no longer move posts around on the board—they become static. I can still move them on the Padlet site, and the changes will show up on the Canvas page. Also I can create new posts on the Canvas page and I can move them about, but only until the page reloads, or until I go away to a different page and then return. At that point, all the posts become static on the board.
Has anyone else experienced this or found a workaround?
This was on MacOS Monterey 12.3.1, and it persisted on three different browsers.
Thanks!
Hi all, last week I hosted a webinar at my institution where I showcased Padlet and demonstrated how to integrate Padlet boards into Canvas. Feel free to check if out if you have never explored the platform.
Technology Spotlight: Padlet - YouTube
You can also visit the Canvas course I created for the webinar:
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Hi Sean- Question for you- snufer, When creating an assignment using Padlet, would you set it to "no s...
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Hi aik0002 - We have made progress on vetting both FlipGrid and Padlet. For FlipGrid we had to work directly w...
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snufer thanks for reminding people about the marvel that padlet is. So many uses. I love it and embed it all the t...
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...nd require that they submit the URL to their Padlet. Sometimes I have students share their Padlets via embedding in d...
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...as anyone had any success with working with Padlet on a security review? Thanks!
When using the Padlet LTI 1.3 in Canvas the framing size means the Padlets are embedded way too small. There is a work around where you create a new topic with the Padlet 1.3 LTI, choose your Padlet from the list and embed. This will still display too small but then you duplicate the topic and the duplicate Padlet then displays in the correct size. You then have to move each Padlet page to wherever you needed it in your list of topics, then delete the duplicated. Some modules have multiple Padlets and this becomes quite irritating to do when they could just display correctly in the first instance.
Adjust the framing size of the Padlet LTI 1.3 to display the padlets in a more user friendly size.
admin,instructor,student,designer,observer
I can't believe it's just two more weeks until InstructureCon, and I've got a lot to do: I need to more-or-less get my classes ready for Fall (since I'll be busy with family stuff in August), AND I have lots of pre-InstCon prep I'd like to get done. So, you can expect a lot of blog posts here in the coming days, especially on my Feedback Project, which is the focus for my class redesign this summer.
I am feeling really excited about this because feedback is a part of EVERY course design, right? So I hope that the materials I am gathering here for my own feedback-focused redesign can be useful to everybody, even if you have different goals and philosophies that drive your classes. I am putting all my feedback resources here in an open Canvas course space to share with as wide an audience as possible:
Exploring Growth Mindset: FEEDBACK
Today I set up my Padlet, which I installed in the Canvas sapce using the Redirect Tool, and then adding that to the navigation:
This Padlet will serve several different purposes:
* a place to save and share graphics that I don't put in a blog post anywhere
* a place to share graphics from my blog posts (in which case I include a link to the blog post)
* a place to share graphics from students' blog posts (that will start up in the fall)
* a source of writing prompts for students to use as they learn more about feedback processes
* a source of good material for my daily class announcements
I used a general all-purpose Growth Mindset Padlet for similar purposes last year, and I think it is going to work even better with the more specific focus on Feedback this year. 🙂
So, I now have my FOUR main feedback curation spaces set up and ready to go:
Diigo: where I am bookmarking lots of feedback resources, also displayed in Canvas
Padlet: with a focus on graphics / infographics, also displayed in Canvas
Feedback Cats: who have their own blog posts and who show up also in the cat randomizer
Twitter Moment: which shows up in Canvas and in my Feedback Cats blog sidebar.
As you can see, I'm all about CURATING and RE-USING resources that other people create. Most of what I share with my students is created by others. My own bit of creative work is the Feedback Cats, but those cats also depend on other people's content, as the texts are inspired by articles and infographics that others have created.
So my advice is: don't try to create content by yourself. Instead, curate and re-purpose! It takes less time AND it results in even better content. Diigo, Padlet, and Twitter are my three favorite curation tools these days. What are your favorites?
Pandas work together to create the best content.
Explore Padlet in Canvas with me. Padlet allows you to create a digital storyboard for your students. Whether you have used Padlet previously or not, join us as we practice integrating Padlet into class content. You will leave with a myriad of ideas for assignments and activities.
In this session, we will discuss and brainstorm basic functionality of the Padlet platform, various assessment and content presentation techniques using Padlet, and tips and tricks for using Padlet to engage students and build learning communities
The field of educational technology is advancing and evolving at a rapid pace. As such, it is important to keep tabs on the current state of the industry. Padlet is a platform that embeds into Canvas content pages and works on all internet devices, allowing users to brainstorm, storyboard, curate resources, take notes, share multimedia and internet assets, etc.
This webinar will begin with a brief introduction to the Padlet platform and how to use it to create, curate, and present content in your course. We will showcase various types of boards and demonstrate several examples of class activities and assignment. Attendees will explore the tools and functionality of the platform, as well as aspects of storytelling, content curation, and collaboration within the classroom.
Presenter Bio
Dr Sean Nufer is the Senior Director of Teaching and Learning at TCS Education System
I posted this idea yesterday, recieved an answer, the but answer does not reflect my question.
I have copy and pasted my original idea/question and the reply for reference.
I am not able to place embedded code from Padlet, Sway, etc. at the </> part of the rich editor. When I paste it in the </> frame, it does not paste. This causes our free Canvas lesson pages to be very "texty".
It would be great for students if I was able to follow the same steps to embed content from other sites into my free Canvas courses as I am in my paid school Canvas courses. I am using the same steps, but with no embed happening in my free Canvas courses.
Previous Idea and Answer plus Archive Note below
Please allow embedding using code that I want to copy and paste into the </> part of the free Canvas pages, assignments, etc. This is a small addition that will enrich the experience for students in virtual learning settings. I can do it on my school Canvas but I want to also have this feature for students in my personal Canvas account as well.
Thank you for your consideration.
Melanie Wiscount
Status changed to: Archived
Free for Teachers accounts can use the same allowed HTML in the HTML Editor that is used by paid instances of Canvas. Please refer to the Canvas HTML Editor Allowlist PDF page, which also provides links to using the HTML editor in the Canvas Rich Content Editor.
Thanks.