Topics Map > Canvas

Canvas - Teacher's Beginning of Course Checklist

This guide describes important steps you should complete to prepare a Canvas course. Complete these steps before your course begins.
  1. Locate Your Course in Canvas
  2. Import Specific Content
  3. Post or Update Your Syllabus
  4. Configure Assignment Due Dates
  5. Configure Course Participation Settings
  6. Publish Your Course
  7. Optional Steps:
    • Nickname Your Courses and Organize Your Canvas Dashboard
    • Prepare for the End of your Course
    • Learn how to Create and Manage Audio and Video in Canvas

Step One: Locate Your Course in Canvas

Scheduled classes are available in Canvas 50 days before the scheduled class start date. This means classes beginning later in the term won’t be created at the same time as those starting in the first course session.

Newly-created courses may not be added to your Canvas Dashboard by default, so remember to check your All Courses page to locate newly-created courses. You can also use this page to manage which courses show on your Canvas Dashboard and locate past courses.

Screenshot shows the Courses pop-out menu in Canvas, marked with a green arrow. The All Courses link is shown at the top of the menu, also marked with a green arrow.
Screenshot of the Courses button and the All Courses link at the top of the pop-out menu.

Step Two: Import Specific Content

Canvas makes it easy to copy content from a different course using the Course Import Tool. You can use this tool to import content from your own course, a shared departmental template, or a colleague’s course you can already access.

Please import just the items you need, instead of importing “All content”. We recommend selecting specific items to avoid creating duplicate items in your course. Also, don’t import:

  • Items that are only useful in a specific term: Consider skipping Calendar events and Announcements, because they’re usually based on the previous course’s schedule.
  • Student Information module from previous terms: This information is now included in the Navigation menu of all Canvas courses and the previous modules are now out of date.
Screenshot shows the Select Content panel during a pending course content import. A selection of modules are selected, along with one quiz. Selected items are indicated by a blue checkmark to the left of those items in the list.
Screenshot of the "Select Content" panel

Sharing Course Designs and Accessing Past Courses

If this is your first time teaching a course and you need a past version, please reach out to the previous instructor. Canvas administrators will need permission from that course's instructor or your department chair to share the course design with you. For more information about sharing course designs, please read the guides linked below:

Check All Links in Your Course

Links to public webpages, YouTube videos, library resources, or online databases can change at any time. Even if the link still works, the content on that linked page could change without you knowing it.

Before your course begins, check every link to make sure (1) it still works and (2) it leads to the correct content. At minimum, click the Validate Links in Content button to to run the Canvas Course Link Validator. Check the links in your course design every semester; this is particularly important if you import an older course design that hasn't been used recently.

Confirm Link Functionality with the Student View

If you utilize a course design shared with you from another instructor, the links in their course may route to content you and your students can't access, like links to the previous instructor's personal OneDrive. Use the Student View to confirm links are working properly, even if you already used the Validator tool. (This is a good time to click through your course to view it from a student's perspective and make sure everything works as you expect.)

Screenshot shows the Course Link Validator tool in a Canvas course. This validation found 43 broken links.
The Course Link Validator in this course located 43 broken links.

Step Three: Post or Update Your Syllabus

Please add a syllabus to your Canvas course. If you have a syllabus in your course from a previous term, remember to update it.

Note: if you’re adapting a course designed by another instructor, please check both your modules and the Syllabus tool to makes sure there isn’t information listed specific to previous versions of the course. For example, check the listed contact information to make sure it includes your preferred email address and office hours schedule.

If you’d like to use a Word or PDF syllabus document, add it to your course’s first module; this will ensure students see it as soon as they begin and always know where to find it as the course progresses. You can add your file directly into your first module, or you can create a new page and link to your syllabus document using the Rich Content Editor.

You can also use the Syllabus feature that’s built into Canvas to host your course syllabus, and then link to this tool from your first module. UW-Superior instructors often choose not to use the Syllabus tool since they’re already using a syllabus document; if you won’t be using the Syllabus tool, please hide it from your course Navigation to prevent students confusing the Syllabus tool and your syllabus document.

Screenshot shows a module labeled Course Information in a Canvas course, which includes a page named Syllabus, annoted in red. Screenshot shows the Syllabus tool in a Canvas course. The Syllabus tool link in the Navigation menu is annoted in red.
The first screenshot shows a document labeled "Syllabus" in a module named "Course Information". This is not to be confused with the Syllabus tool in Canvas, shown in the second screenshot.

Step Four: Configure Assignment Due Dates

While your syllabus likely includes some assignment due dates or a course schedule, it’s still important to configure due dates for any assignments you create in your Canvas course. Course assignments that don’t have a due date will not show on students' Canvas To Do list or Calendar.

If you’d like students to be able to submit to your Canvas assignments after the assignment is due, add a later assignment End date as well.

Screenshot shows the Edit Assignment panel. A due date of January 2 at 11:59pm is applied in the Due: text entry box. Screenshot shows the Assign panel. The Assign To text entry box shows teh assignment is assigned to Everyone. A due date of January 2 at 11:59pm is applied in the Due: text entry box.
Remember to apply a due date to your assignments. These due dates automatically populate your students' Canvas Calendar tool.

Step Five: Configure a Course Start and End Date

Instructors can manage their Canvas course Participation settings from the course Settings page (Settings > Course Details). These settings manage when students can access your course and complete course activities.

Canvas courses always use the “Term” Participation option by default. This option doesn’t require you to set a start or end date and works well for most fifteen-week courses.

If you're teaching a shorter-session course that begins or ends mid-semester, select the “Course” Participation option instead, and input both a Start and End date. Choose an end date at least 48 hours after you post final grades. Once the course ends, students no longer have access to your feedback and grades.

Step Six: Publish Your Course

When you’re ready for students to access your course, remember to publish it.

This final step is important. Please note that course publishing is separate from publishing modules and your course’s Start and End date. Students will not be able to access your course if you don’t publish it, regardless of what Start date you configure, or whether you’ve published modules and items within your course.


Optional: Nickname Your Courses and Cleanup Your Canvas Dashboard

Nickname Your Courses

You can nickname your courses in Canvas at any time to make them easier to identify. For example, if you teach multiple versions of a course in the same term, it may be helpful to nickname them so you can easily distinguish between various sections.

Please do not adjust the Course Name field on the course Settings page. This field impacts what students and administrators see as well. Nickname courses instead; nicknaming only changes how the courses are displayed for you.

This might a good time to cleanup your Canvas Dashboard. If you’d like to remove old courses from your Dashboard, open your All Courses page. Using the star icons on the left of the “Course” column, click to fill in the star next to any course you want listed on your Dashboard, and click any orange stars to remove that course from your Dashboard.

Prepare for the End of your Course

There are a few steps you should complete at the end of your Canvas course. For more information, please review our Teacher’s End of Course Checklist.

Add Audio and Video to Your Course

If you plan on adding a welcome video to your first module, sharing recordings with students, or using video assignments in your course, please read our detailed guide about How to Create and Manage Canvas Audio and Video Using Kaltura My Media. Share this guide with your students as well; its relevant to everyone who uses our Canvas system.

Need Help?

Please visit our guide about How to Get Help Using Canvas and Kaltura My Media.

Screenshot shows the Help menu button located at the end of the Canvas Global Navigation Menu. Screenshot shows the How to Get Help Using Canvas and Kaltura My Media page on the UW-Superior KnowledgeBase site.
Click the Help button in the main Canvas menu to access 24/7 Canvas Support via chat. If you need help creating or using audio and video in your course, first read our step-by-step support guide.

Do you have a quick question about how to use Canvas? Please chat with Canvas Support from the Canvas Help menu. Canvas Support staff is available 24/7.

If you need help designing your course in Canvas, please email canvas@uwsuper.edu. We’ll schedule a consultation with an instructional designer so you can discuss the needs of your course and how best to address them using Canvas and the tools availble to UW-Superior instructors.

And if you’re brand new to Canvas, please check out the following resources to learn the basics:

Screenshot shows the Learning Canvas course open on LinkedIn Learning. The first video in the introduction module is playing. Screenshot shows the student view of the Home page of our Canvas Basics course for students.
We recommend both LinkedIn Learning resources and our Canvas Basics course. We also offer regular training sessions for new instructors, as well as consultation appointments.


Keywords:
canvas setup design teachers 
Doc ID:
135570
Owned by:
Michael M. in UW Superior
Created:
2024-02-19
Updated:
2024-08-30
Sites:
UW Superior