To Our Amazing Educators Everywhere,
Happy Teacher Appreciation Week!
Found this content helpful? Log in or sign up to leave a like!
Annotated submissions are a great development and really open up the possibilities for assessing students.
However it raises the challenge of how we might undertake a similar form of assessment, but with data entry in a more structured form than annotation permits, the intention being to be able to control data entry quality and to recover the data as entered after the assignment has closed.
One way that we can currently do this is by setting up a table or html document in the structure and with the fields that we want.
Has anyone come up with a similar requirement or solution ?
On a related note, it would be useful to have a 'wiki' assignment at individual student level (perhaps I've missed this somewhere, but no, I don't want to finagle this via a discussion assignment type). My key 'want' for a wiki assignment is that the student should be able to return to and edit the page multiple times before submission, and potentially after submission.
Text assignment upload could work in this way, but each time the student returns to the assignment they currently get a new RCE text area to upload to.
Does anyone have any suggestions on this ?
I can think of a couple of options. For your first question, one option is to use New Quizzes and fill in the blank questions. The options for answers include regular expressions, which give us a lot of control over what students can type in the answer fields. This obviously works best where students are filling in parts of the code provided and not editing the code provided.
For editing (and this works for a wiki assignment too), I suggest using a Google Doc linked from the assignment instructions. For an individual assignment like editing code, if you add /copy at the end of the shared URL from a Google Doc (instead of /edit), the link forces the user to create a copy in their own Google Drive. They can then submit that file as a file submission option.
If the wiki assignment is one for multiple students, I suggest using the Collaborations tool. That allows us to use the Canvas user list to control access to a document, and it allows students to use any Google account. Collaborations can also be set up for Microsoft Office 365.
Here are a couple of documents from the Canvas Guides on these options:
This is a great question with lots of possible answers, @paul_fynn. I hope we hear from more colleagues in the community.
To participate in the Instructure Community, you need to sign up or log in:
Sign In