University Center for Teaching and Learning
How to create assignments for your canvas course.
- Quick Start
- Instructor Help
- Student Help
How to Create Assignments
Using assignments in Canvas provides a streamlined process for assigning homework and creating quizzes for students. Canvas considers an ‘assignment’ to be anything that is graded, whether that be a quiz or homework assignment, and whether it’s delivered entirely online, paper-and-pencil, or is a participatory assignment with no actual deliverable.
This Quick Start guide will cover the creation of assignments where the student submits a file electronically, on paper, using an external tool such as Turnitin or Panopto , or where no submission is expected (e.g. class participation). See How to Create Tests and Quizzes for Your Canvas Course and Create and Manage Discussions for more information about using those tools as assignments.
1. In the Course Navigation menu, click the Assignments link.
2. Click “ +Assignment ” at the top right.
3. Write the assignment title and directions for students.
4. Assign the number of points available for the assignment.
5. Choose an “ Assignment Group” . Assignment groups are, in essence, a category of assignment. For more information about using Assignment Groups, see the Canvas guides regarding Assignments.
6. There are four submission types :
- No Submission: an activity where nothing will be collected from students (e.g. a participation grade)
- For the full details about the online assignment subtypes, (text entry, annotation, file upload, etc.), please see the official documentation .
- We have a recorded mini-webinar on annotation assignments, including assignment ideas, available on the Training Webinars page.
- On Paper: assignments/quizzes/activities that were written on paper and collected by the instructor
- External Tool: assignments submitted through a 3rd party tool that is integrated with Canvas, such as a textbook publisher’s website or Turnitin
7. Submission Attempts: You may allow unlimited submission attempts for Online assignments, or restrict attempts to one or more. When a student submits to an assignment they have already submitted to, the previous submission is retained as well, and the instructor may view both.
8. Group Assignments and Peer Reviews: Assignments can be created as either a group assignment or peer review assignment.
9. Assign options- You can assign an assignment to your entire class, a specific student, and/or a section of your class. You can also set the due date and the availability dates (when your students can submit their assignment). Each section can have different due dates and availability dates.
10. If you are finished creating the assignment, click on “ Save & Publish “. If you are not finished creating the assignment, click on “ Save ” and you may come back and work on it more later without students having access to it.
Instructor Help for Assignments
Creating assignments.
- How do I create an assignment?
- How do I add a moderated assignment to be graded by multiple reviewers?
- How do I create an online assignment?
- How do I add or edit details in an assignment?
- How do I add or edit points for an assignment?
- What assignment types can I create in a course?
- How do I limit submission attempts for an assignment?
- How do I add an assignment that includes anonymous grading?
- How do I enable anonymous instructor annotations in student submissions?
- How do I import SCORM files as an assignment?
- How do I publish or unpublish an assignment as an instructor?
Managing Assignments
- How do I use the Assignments Index Page?
- Can a student resubmit Canvas assignments?
- How do I assign an assignment to everyone in a course?
- How do I assign an assignment to a course group?
- How do I assign an assignment to a course section?
- How do I assign an assignment to an individual student?
- How do I view differentiated assignments with different due dates in a course?
- How do I bulk update due dates and availability dates as an instructor?
- How do I delete an assignment?
- How do I duplicate an assignment?
- How do I move or reorder an assignment?
- How do I use Direct Share to copy an assignment to another course?
- How do I use Direct Share to send an assignment to another instructor?
Creating and Managing Peer Review Assignments
- How do I create a peer review assignment?
- How do I use peer review assignments in a course?
- How do I automatically assign peer reviews for an assignment?
- How do I manually assign peer reviews for an assignment?
- How do I view student peer review comments as an instructor?
Creating External Tool Assignments
- How do I add an assignment using an external app?
- How do I create a cloud assignment with a Microsoft Office 365 file?
Using Assignment Groups
- How do I add an assignment group in a course?
- How do I create an assignment shell in an assignment group?
- How do I create rules for an assignment group?
- How do I move or reorder an assignment group?
- How do I weight the final course grade based on assignment groups?
Grading Considerations
- How do I add a grading scheme to an assignment?
- How do I download all student submissions for an assignment?
- How do I upload all student submissions for an assignment?
- How do I exclude an assignment from the course’s final grades?
- How do I give extra credit in a course?
Student Help for Assignments
- How do I view Assignments as a student?
- How do I filter assignments by type as a student?
- How do I submit an online assignment?
- How do I submit a text entry assignment?
- How do I enter a URL as an assignment submission?
- How do I submit a media file as an assignment submission?
- How do I upload a file as an assignment submission in Canvas?
- How do I upload a file from Microsoft Office 365 as an assignment submission?
- How do I know when my assignment has been submitted?
- How do I manage celebration animations in Canvas as a student?
- How do I submit a cloud assignment with Microsoft Office 365?
- How do I download assignment submissions from all my courses?
- How do I annotate a file as an assignment submission in Canvas?
- How do I use DocViewer in Canvas assignments as a student?
- How do I submit a PDF assignment with annotations in the Student app on my Android device?
- How do I add annotations to a submission in the Student app on my iOS device?
Groups and Peer
- How do I submit an assignment on behalf of a group?
- How do I know if I have a peer review assignment to complete?
- How do I submit a peer review to an assignment?
- Where can I find my peers’ feedback for peer reviewed assignments?
- How do I view the rubric for my assignment?
- How do I view the rubric for my external tool assignment?
- How do I view rubric results for my assignment?
- How do I know when my instructor has graded my assignment?
- How do I view assignment comments from my instructor?
- How do I view annotation feedback comments from my instructor directly in my assignment submission?
- How do I view my Roll Call Attendance report as a student?
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Getting Started with Canvas Assignments
- Last modification date Updated On July 26, 2024
- Categories: Assignments , Canvas , Uncategorized
- Categories: assessment , Getting Started , Grading
Canvas Assignments are a way for instructors to provide students opportunities to practice using the knowledge and skills they have gained or to assess student performance related to such knowledge and skills. (Creating an Assignment is the only way to create a new column in the Gradebook.)
In Canvas there are four basic Submission Types for assignments. The submission types include:
- No Submission : For assignments for which you are not collecting any content from the students.
- Text Entry : For students to enter text directly into a text box on Canvas.
- Website URL : For students to enter a URL (usually to a blog, video, podcast, etc.).
- Media Recordings : For students to upload or record media for submission.
- File Uploads : For students to upload files for submission ( Restrict Upload File Types will allow you to limit which types of files may be submitted).
- On Paper : For assignments students will submit in person.
- External Tool : For assignments which students will submit through a third-party tool (such as Turnitin, Panopto Video Quiz, and PlayPosit).
Managing an Assignment
Managing assignment groups.
When getting started with Assignments, learn to
- Create an assignment shell with the Canvas guide How do I create an assignment?
If you select Peer Reviews Appear Anonymously , annotation tools in SpeedGrader will become unavailable.
If you change the Assign To area from Everyone to select students after submissions have already begun, and do not have a second set of Assign To dates, submissions from unassigned students will disappear.
- Published assignments are visible as existing outside of availability dates, but students cannot see the details.
- If looking to update the due and/or availability dates on multiple assignments, see How do I bulk update due dates and availability dates as an instructor?
- If choosing the option to make an assignment a Group Assignment : If only assigning to specific groups, make sure to click the X on the Everyone Else choice under Assign to .
Media Recording Assignments are not recommended due to technical reasons. Instead, have students submit media by embedding it in a Text Entry assignment through Panopto .
Clearly express expectations and criteria for grading by using a Rubric .
Be cautious limiting submission attempts, as students often make mistakes loading documents and need multiple attempts to ensure you have the correct submission.
- Delete an assignment with the Canvas guide How do I delete an assignment?
- This duplication process will not work for Quizzes.
- Attach a rubric to an assignment for grading or to communicate expectations to students with the Canvas guide How do I add a rubric to an assignment?
Accessibility Tips
- Use descriptive text for links, instead of long URLs or ‘click here’.
- Make instructions brief and to-the-point. Avoid long paragraphs and sentences.
- Consider allowing multiple submission types to accommodate technical limitations students may face.
Assignment Groups are a way to categorize different graded items in Canvas. For example, you may have journals, blogs, and essays which your students create in your course. Assignment Groups allow you to label and group different types of assignments separately in order to better organize and for ease when applying weighting (see How do I weight the final course grade based on assignment groups? ). When getting started with Assignment Groups, learn to
- Add and delete assignment groups with the Canvas guide How do I add an assignment group in a course?
- Move or reorder an assignment group with the Canvas guide How do I move or reorder an assignment group?
- Make rules governing grading expectations within assignment groups with the Canvas guide How do I create rules for an assignment group?
Additional Resources
- CTI Resource: What is the Assignments Index Page?
- How do I bulk update due dates and availability dates as an instructor?
- How do I weight the final course grade based on assignment groups?
- Canvas Student Guide
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Weighting Grades, Giving Extra Credit, and Other Tips on Managing Assignments and Grades in Canvas
by Cecilia Lo | Aug 20, 2018 | Canvas , Canvas Features/Functions , How-tos
Canvas provides a fully functional gradebook that can help both instructors and students to keep track of their progress in a course. Once you figure out its few quirks, you will be able to manage grades with ease.
I. Some Terminology: Assignment Groups vs. Assignments, & How They Relate to Gradebook Columns II. Weighting Grades III. Muting Grade Notifications IV. Grade History – Who Changed The Grade When? V. Using Grading Schemes VI. Curving Grades VII. Giving Extra Credit VIII. Tools and Course Setup for Multiple TAs IX. Excluding an Assignment from the Course’s Final Grades X. Filtering by Modules, Automatic Late Policies, & Other New, Helpful Functions in the New Gradebook XI. Resources
I. Some Terminology: Assignment Groups vs. Assignments, & How They Relate to Gradebook Columns
There are two common sources of confusion in understanding and using Canvas assignments and gradebooks. One is the distinction between Assignment Groups and Assignments. Assignment Groups are categories of assignments, such as problem sets, papers, quizzes, exams, presentations, and participation. They are important for organizational purposes and particularly important if you want to weight grades. Assignments are individual assessment items that receive grades, as, for example, first paper, second paper, or final paper. Assignment Groups and assignments are created separately. You can move assignments into different Assignment Groups by dragging them on the Assignment Index page or editing the Assignment.
Assignment groups vs Assignments
A second common source of confusion is how to create gradebook columns. In Canvas, assignments are tightly integrated with the Gradebook and the only way to create a gradebook column is to create and publish an assignment . This may seem unintuitive at first glance, as not all assignments require online submissions (e.g. attendance and participation or assignments done on paper). However, instructors can choose different submission types when they create an assignment— No Submission, Online, or On Paper . The one-to-one correspondence between the number of assignment items and the number of gradebook columns ensures that grading policy is transparent to the students and that both instructors and students always see the same number of assessment items.
II. Weighting Grades
You can have Canvas automatically calculate weighted grades in just a few clicks: on the Assignment Index page, click Options , select Assignment Group Weight , then enter the percentages for each Assignment Group. For example, in a course where the grades are determined as follows:
The process for weighting grades is:
To weight grades, go the the Assignments page, click on the Options button, select Assignment Groups Weight , select the Weight final grades based on assignment groups check box, enter the weights, and click Save .
How Canvas Calculates Weighted Grades for an Assignment Group
Canvas determines weighted grades by calculating:
- the grade (in percentage) of individual Assignment Groups (sum of points scored divided by total possible points);
- the total grade (sum of Assignment Group grades multiplied by their respective weights).
In the example for “Paper Assignments” Group above, there are 4 assignments, each worth 20 points; together they add up to 80 points. The Assignment group counts 30% towards the total grade. If a student scores 18, 16, 10, and 15 respectively, then
The subtotal grade for “Paper Assignment” is: (18 + 16 + 10 + 15)/80*100% = 73.75% The contribution of “Paper Assignment” to the Total grade is: 73.75% * 0.3 = 22.13%
Weighted Grades within an Assignment Group
In the above example, because each assignment has the same maximum points (20 points), each assignment contributes equally within the Assignment Group. If you wish a particular assignment to weigh more, just make sure it has a higher number of total points, or assign it to a separate Assignment Group.
Tips : If you have many assignments (about 10 or more) in one Assignment Group, and the total points for each assignment vary by one or two points, then by arithmetic the assignments contribute essentially equally to the Assignment Group grades, as the difference between each assignment after multiplying by the weighted percentage would be relatively small. (e.g. 1 point in an Assignment Group with a total of 100 points and which counts as 30% of the total grade is 0.3 points of the total grade.)
How Weighted Grades Appear in the Gradebook
In the Canvas Gradebook, each gradebook column (with linked heading) shows the raw points for an assignment (unless you have applied grade curving to it); the Assignment Group column (with black heading) shows the percentage a student scored for that Assignment Group; and the Total column shows the final, weighted grade.
In the example above, the Assignment Group column for “Paper Assignment (30.00% of grade)” is 73.75%.
NB : If a student didn’t submit a particular assignment, be sure to give it zero points. If you leave the score blank ( – ), Canvas will treat it as excused and ignore it in its calculation of the Assignment Group subtotal and Total scores.
For more about weighting grades, see: https://community.canvaslms.com/docs/DOC-10059-415267002
III. Muting Grade Notifications
When instructors enter grades into Canvas’ gradebook, a notification is sent to the student automatically . Some students are prone to panic if they find that their peers have received their grades but they have not. You can release grades to all students simultaneously if you select Mute Assignment and stop notifications from going out until you “unmute” the assignment. Muting assignments allows you time to review and make grade adjustments without sending students multiple notifications.
To mute an assignment, go to Grades, click on the options dropdown for the assignment, and select Mute Assignment:
Mute Assignment link in Canvas Gradebook
NB : Canvas does not include muted assignments in the Assignment Group and Total grade calculations—if it did, students would be able to calculate backwards and figure out what their grades are. Be sure to unmute assignments when you have finished grading them so that the gradebook calculations are correct.
For more about muting assignments, see: https://community.canvaslms.com/docs/DOC-12961-4152724339
IV. Grade History – Who Changed The Grade When?
From time to time you may wish to track how a student’s grade for a particular assignment changes over time, especially when there are multiple instructors or TAs giving grades in a course. Canvas’ Grade History tool can be helpful in such cases.
To access Grade History, click on the Options (gear) icon in Grades and select View Gradebook History . (In the New Gradebook, select the Gradebook dropdown, then “Gradebook History…”.)
To view grade history in the old Gradebook, select View Gradebook History from the gear icon on the Grades page, enter filter parameters and click the Filter button.
How to read Gradebook History
- The Before column shows the grade before the change at a particular date and time (row).
- The After column shows the grade after the change at a particular date and time (row).
- The Current column always shows the latest grade; it is the grade a student has now.
Example of Grade History
In the example above, on Jun 27, 2018 at 4:25pm, the Before column is empty because it is the first time a grade (0/20) is entered. On Aug 16, 2018, this grade is changed from 0/20 to 20/20. The Current grade for all rows is 16/20 because on Aug 17, 2018, the last time this grade was edited, the grade has been changed from 20/20 to 16/20.
NB : The dropdown selection can take a few seconds to display, especially if there are many students in a course. Be sure to click the maroon Filter button at the end to filter the results. You can filter for more than one category; for example, you can filter for student name and assignment name simultaneously.
V. Using Grading Schemes
You can apply a specific grading scheme to your assignment and/or overall course grade so that each letter or performance grade corresponds to a specific numeric grade range (e.g. A/Excellent = 91% to 100%; A-/Good = 88%-90%; etc). Once you have created a grading scheme, it can be reused in other courses you teach with just a few clicks.
Select Grading Scheme for an Assignment
To display letter grade for an assignment, edit the assignment, choose Letter Grade under the Display Grade as dropdown menu.
- Choose the appropriate grading scheme (see “Choose/Create New Grading Schemes” below).
Choose/Create New Grading Schemes
Click on the View Grading Scheme link under Display Grade as to choose the appropriate grading scheme.
Click on the Select Another Scheme link at the top right to select another grading scheme.
- To create a new grading scheme, click manage grading schemes link at the bottom right, then click the Add grading scheme button on the right.
Use Grading Scheme for the Total Grade in Your Course
You can display the Total grade of your course as a letter/performance grade by going to Settings > Course Details > Select the check box for Enable course grading scheme > Choose the appropriate grading scheme > Click the Update Course Details button at the bottom of the page.
To enable grading scheme for the course total grade, go to course Settings , check the Enable course grading scheme box, click the Select grading scheme link, then select the appropriate grading scheme, click Done , then click the maroon Update Course Details button.
For more information, see:
- [Overview] How do I use grading schemes in a course? https://community.canvaslms.com/docs/DOC-13067-4152206341
- How do I add a grading scheme to an assignment? https://community.canvaslms.com/docs/DOC-10216-415282270
- How do I enable a grading scheme for a course? https://community.canvaslms.com/docs/DOC-12906-415257089
- How do I add a grading scheme in a course? https://community.canvaslms.com/docs/DOC-10313-415257090
VI. Curving Grades
You can use the Canvas Gradebook to curve grades for individual assignments. When you enter a desired average grade, Canvas will automatically adjust the scores as a bell curve 66% around the average curve.
Grade curving is available for assignments only ; if you wish to curve the total grade of a course, you will need to do so manually. Grade curving cannot be undone (although you can use Gradebook History to view pre-curved grades) and is advisable in courses where only a certain number of students can pass, or when you require a fixed distribution of grades distributed throughout the class.
Step-by-step instructions on curving grades are available at: https://community.canvaslms.com/docs/DOC-12832-415255003
VII. Giving Extra Credit
Do you want to give extra credit to students but are unsure how get Canvas Gradebook to recognize it? There are a few ways to do this:
Method 1: Add Extra Points to an Existing Assignment/Quiz
You can give extra credit to a particular assignment by adding the extra points to the total points a student scored, even if the student received a perfect score. Canvas allows you to give points greater than the highest possible points.
For example, If an assignment is worth a total of 100 points, a student earned a perfect score of 100, and you want to reward them with 5 extra credit points, you can enter 105 as the grade for the assignment.
If you use Canvas’ SpeedGrader for grading, you can enter the extra points in SpeedGrader. If you use rubrics in conjunction with SpeedGrader, you can add the extra points either to an existing rubric criterion or to an “Extra Credit” criterion. If you decide to add an “Extra Credit” criterion, make sure that the assignment point total excludes the total maximum extra credit points (i.e. the rubric is worth more points than the assignment) so that the actual assignment points are not affected by whether a student receives extra credit or not.
For example, if your rubric has four criteria with 4 maximum points each, and an “extra credit” criterion with 2 points each, then the maximum point total for your rubric is 4×4 + 2 = 18 points. But your assignment point total should be 16 points.
You can give extra credit in Quizzes as well. To adjust the point value for an entire quiz, use fudge points .
Method 2: Grant Extra Points in a Stand-alone “Extra Credit” Assignment and Gradebook Column
If you want to keep track of extra credit for the course as a whole, you can create a stand-alone extra credit assignment and gradebook column and adjust a student’s points as needed.
If you don’t weight your grades , you can create a separate assignment with 0 points. Any extra points given in this gradebook column will be added to the total points for the course.
If you weight your grades with assignment groups, you will need to create an extra credit assignment group with a weight greater than 0% and an assignment with greater than 0 points in order for Canvas Gradebook to calculate the total score correctly. All the assignment groups in your course plus the extra credit assignment group should weigh more than 100% in total.
One example of a correct setup for assignment groups with a maximum of 10% (or 10 points) extra credit for the course is:
Notice that the first 4 assignment groups, containing assignments that all students are assessed on, total to 100%. This ensures that any assignment placed within the Extra Credit assignment group will have either a positive or neutral effect on your students’ overall grade.
- If you are weighting your assignment groups, please pay attention to how weighted groups can affect the Gradebook if assignments are worth zero points.
- If you have drop rules set in an assignment group, adding extra points may affect your students’ scores.
For a detailed, step-by-step guide on how to give extra credit within Canvas, see: https://community.canvaslms.com/docs/DOC-9940-415278195
VIII. Tools and Course Setup for Multiple TAs
If you have multiple TAs working from the same Canvas course site and they are each assigned to a specific group of students, Academic Technology Solutions can help you set up your course site so that they only see the grades of the students they are responsible for. To get started, email the URL of your course site and a brief description of your needs to [email protected] .
IX. Excluding an Assignment from the Course’s Final Grades
If you wish to provide feedback for assignments without the assignment counting toward Gradebook calculations, you can exclude the assignment in the final grade calculation. (Note: this excludes the grade for all students. If you want to assign an assignment to a specific group of students, you should specifically assign course sections , assign individual students , or assign course groups to the assignment.)
For step-by-step instructions, see: https://community.canvaslms.com/docs/DOC-10120-4152618765
Alternatively, you can have Canvas automatically drop the lowest (or highest) grade in an assignment group. See https://community.canvaslms.com/docs/DOC-9880-4152232976 for step-by-step instructions.
X. Filtering by Modules, Automatic Late Policies, & Other New, Helpful Functions in the New Gradebook
In January 2018, Canvas released the New Gradebook, which offers a number of enhanced features, such as filtering by modules, automatic late policies, and customizable coloring. The current gradebook is expected to be deprecated and replaced by the New Gradebook sometime in the second half of 2018. For more information on how to opt-in and use the new features, see ATS’ “ Introducing the New Gradebook ” blog post.
XI. Resources
You can see the complete Instructor Guides for the topics discussed above at:
- Assignments
- Discussion Forums
- Online Quizzes
- Speedgrader
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TC Technology Knowledge Base
- Submit an assignment in Canvas
Updated on May 15, 2024
1. In your course navigation click Assignments.
2. Click on the assignment you want to submit.
3. Click Start Assignment or Submit Assignment in the top right corner.
4. Read the instructions given by your instructor. For a file upload assignment, click Choose File.
5. Choose the attachment from you browser that you would like to upload and click Open.
6. Once your file appears, click Submit Assignment.
7. You will receive confirmation of you submission in the top right corner.
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Search Utah State University:
Create an assignment in canvas.
In Canvas, any activity with an associated point value is considered an Assignment and will appear on the Assignments page, as well as in the gradebook. Assignment formats include quizzes, discussions, online document submission, and no submission, and external tool assignments. You can give an assignment to everyone in the course or target it to a specific section or user.
Types of Graded Activities in Canvas
The following table lists the types of graded activities in Canvas and their strengths and weaknesses.
Multiple submission types, alignment with rubrics and outcomes, no paper waste, easier to control content, easier to randomize, faster grading, student submission directly to instructor and TAs | Potential technical problems such as network problems or internet connectivity loss, possible file size limitations, less personal feedback, learning curve for teachers or students not familiar with Canvas or technology in general | |
Quizzes | Automatic grading and regrading, multiple attempts, instant feedback | No regrading if you pulled questions from a question bank, cannot add points automatically, limited regrading options |
Surveys | Instant feedback, faster grading, no paper waste, faster than passing out paper surveys to hundreds of students Points awarded based on survey submission | Potential technical problems Not available in New Quizzes format |
Discussions | Discussions not limited to a single class period. Students have more time to formulate responses, keeps a record of comments for grading purposes, shy students more likely to participate. All students in the class can see the submission so students can get ideas from each other. | Potentially time-consuming to read comments from large groups of students, potential technical problems, students may not do their own work after seeing work of others (can be circumvented using the requirement to post before seeing other student replies) |
To Create an Assignment
On the Course Navigation menu, click Assignments
On the Assignments list page, click Add Assignment
On the Assignment edit page, create the assignment by adding a name, instructions, and specifying the assignment options
(See the Assignment Options table for details)
Assignment Options
The following table describes the options for creating assignments.
Option | Description |
---|---|
Points | Determines the point value of the assignment. |
Assignment Group | Places the assignment into an assignment group. You can use this option if you want to organize the Assignment list by assignments, discussions, and quizzes. Groups can also be used to filter assignments in the gradebook. The default group is Assignments, so Canvas places all assignments, discussions, and quizzes in that group unless you specify otherwise. For more information, see Create an Assignment Group. |
Display Grade as | Determines the method of grading. Methods include points, percentage, complete/incomplete, letter grade, GPA Scale, or Not Graded. |
Submission Type | Indicates how you want your students to submit the assignment. Submission types include No submission, Online, On paper, or External tool. For more information, see Submission Types. |
Group Assignment | Makes the assignment a group assignment. You can indicate if you will give a group grade or an individual grade. |
Peer Reviews | Requires the students to have the assignment reviewed by another student. |
Assign | Assigns the assignment to a specific group or to everyone. Sets the due date for the assignment. |
Canvas - Get Started
The following list of pages will guide you through getting started with this tool. The current page is listed in bold.
- Log into Canvas
- Notification Preferences
- Access your Course
- Create an Assignment
- Create a Quiz in Canvas
- Add a Syllabus to Canvas
- Early Course Access for Students
- Publish Your Course
- Communication
- Five Keys to Grading
- Prepare Final Grading
About assignments in Canvas
Watch a video overview of Canvas assignments
Why do I have to re-create my assignments in Canvas?
If you already have assignments created in Word or Google docs, Catalyst tools, or posted online, you might wonder, “What’s the point is of recreating them in Canvas?” Not only does Canvas make it easy to create assignments with lots of options (selective release, group assignments, peer review, submission type) it also adds convenience for you and your students.
What are Assignment Groups?
Like Catalyst Gradebook, Canvas prefers for you to create assignment groups for organization. The groups you create control how the gradebook is structured and you can choose to weight final grades based on those groups. By default you begin with a group called Assignments. You can choose to keep all of your assignments in this one group, or create as many new ones as you like.
Where do I create assignments?
You can create assignments in the Assignments area of Canvas or in the Calendar. Your Assignments page will show the work you have assigned. In student view, the Assignments page will show all assigned work and the point value of each (if you set point values when setting up an assignment). Any graded activity (such as a discussion, quiz, essay or project) can be an assignment.
When you create an assignment in your Canvas course it is automatically added to the assignment list on the Syllabus page, the course calendar, and your gradebook. If you change the due date for an assignment, Canvas updates it course-wide. If you alter the assignment you can have Canvas notify your students.
What can I do with assignments?
Assignments can be used to:
- Set up online submissions that can be quickly graded in the SpeedGrader™
- Grade online submissions work submitted on paper
- Set up peer review
- Grade Discussions, either among the whole class or student groups
- Open Quizzes for a limited amount of time
- Create ungraded activities that align with course outcomes
Assignments and Grading
Having your assignments in Canvas and automatically linked to the gradebook means you can take advantage of SpeedGrader and rubrics to make the grading process faster and more efficient. Canvas communication tools allow you to provide your students with text or multimedia feedback on all assignments.
Canvas How-To: Assignments
Section menu close, office of academic technology.
- Canvas Administration
- External LMS User Requests
- Canvas Basics
- ⚙ Ally & Accessibility
- ⚙ Analytics
- ⚙ Announcements
- ⚙ Assignments
- ⚙ Attendance
- ⚙ Closing Courses & Incompletes
- ⚙ Collaborations
- ⚙ Combine Courses
- ⚙ Discussions & Discussions Plus
- ⚙ Extra Credit
- ⚙ Group Assignments
- ⚙ Inbox & Messaging
- ⚙ Journals, Blogs, & Wikis
- ⚙ Extra: Create Tabs on a Page
- ⚙ Panopto Recordings
- ⚙ People, Rosters, & Roles
- ⚙ Profile & User Settings
- ⚙ Quizzes & Accommodations
- ⚙ New Quizzes
- ⚙ SpeedGrader
- ⚙ Turnitin Assignments
- ⚙ Video-Based Assessments
- ⚙ VoiceThread Group Projects in Canvas
- ⚙ Zoom in Canvas
- Instructional Technology
- Online Course Design
- Training Opportunities
- OAT Updates & Tech Tips
- Copyright & the TEACH Act
Contact Information
Mary Stuart Rogers, MSR 380
Adding an Assignment
Canvas Assignment can be used to collect a submission from students electronically, provide instructions for and remind students about an in-class activity, and track extra credit.
How do I create an assignment?
How do I add assignment types, pages, and files as module items?
Editing Assignment Details
After creating an assignment, modify the assignment details and settings by clicking the action menu and select Edit. Update the assignment instructions and guidelines, set the due date, and number of points to earn.
How do I add or edit details in an assignment?
Removing or Duplicating Assignments
Clean up unused assignments by removing them from Modules, or by deleting them from the Assignments page of your course.
How do I delete an assignment?
Establish a routine pattern of assignments and activities for students. When assigning an assignment that students will complete each week, create the assignment once, then duplicate it and move it to subsequent weeks.
How do I duplicate an assignment?
Allowing a Resubmission
By default, resubmissions are always allowed if the instructor leaves the Attempts setting at "Unlimited". After students submit their assignment, they may revisit the assignment to submit a new version. As the instructor, you can view the various versions of the submission, deciding which version to accept and grade. Prevent students from revisiting the assignment by limiting the number of attempts in the assignment settings or set an Until availability date.
Can a student resubmit an assignment?
Creating Group Assignments
To create an assignment that the students will submit as part of a group, check the box for "This is a Group Assignment" in the Group Assignment area.
Understand groups in Canvas
Configuring Peer Reviews
Use the peer review option to pair students up with a partner to review and provide feedback of their work.
How do I create a peer review assignment?
Want to learn more?
View all Canvas Guides for Assignments
Updated: October 11, 2022
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E-Campus Faculty and Staff
How-to: create assignment templates or worksheets in canvas with google drive cloud assignments.
By: Gracia Ostendorf
Imagine this scenario...
Professor Johnson teaches a Nursing course that has several assignments in which students answer questions on a worksheet. As a Miami instructor, Professor Johnson has access to a Google Drive account with her Miami email address. She prefers to create her worksheets in Google Drive, using Google Docs, to ensure that she always uses the most updated version handy and always has access to them no matter what computer she’s working on.
But it’s a tedious process to download each worksheet from her Drive, save it to her computer, and then upload it into each Canvas Assignment for her course. And if she does this, she has to redo the whole process every time she makes a change to a worksheet.
Seems like there should be a smoother process, right? There is - with an integration between Canvas and Google Drive called “Google Drive Cloud Assignments.”
Sharing templates or worksheets with Google Drive Cloud Assignments
Instructors can share an existing file (such as a Google Doc) from their Google Drive as an Assignment in Canvas. When the file is shared, a copy of the file is saved in each student’s Google Drive when they open the Assignment in Canvas. Students can work on their copy of the file within Canvas, or directly within their Google Drive. This is a great option for course assignments that involve a template or worksheet for students to complete.
To create a Cloud Assignment in Canvas using a Google Drive file:
- Navigate to " Assignments" using the left-hand navigation menu.
- Click the “+ Assignment” button, and add your new Assignment’s name, description, point value, and group.
- Under the “Submission Type” drop-down, select "External Tool." Click the “Find” button that appears under External Tool Options.
- Select “Google Drive Cloud Assignment” from the list.
- Locate and select the file you want to share as the Assignment from your Google Drive in the window that appears, then click “Submit.”
- Back on the Configure External Tool window, click the “Select” button. Then “Save” your Assignment or “Save & Publish” if you’re ready for students to see it.
Important information for students on using Google Drive Cloud Assignments:
Students will access the Assignment just as they would any other Assignment in your course - either through the " Assignments" link in the left-hand navigation menu, or within a Module of your course if you have added the Assignment in one of your Modules. They will see the Google Doc (or Sheet, or Slides) embedded on the Assignment page, with a button to Submit the Assignment when they’re ready:
Need instructions to share with your students to explain how they can access and work with Google Drive Cloud Assignments in Canvas? Try this step by step guide:
- How do I submit a cloud assignment with Google Drive?
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You can create online assignments for students to submit their assignments through Canvas. Students can submit formatted text using the Rich Content Editor, website URLs, annotated files, or uploaded files. They can also submit audio or video recordings by recording new media or uploading existing media. Files submitted to an online assignment ...
Learn how to create an assignment in Canvas, how to assign points, due dates, and submission types. Learn two ways to build new assignments in Canvas and ho...
You can submit online assignments in Canvas using several submission types. Instructors can choose what kind of online submissions they want you to use. You may also have the option to resubmit assignments if your instructor allows. Files uploaded using the Rich Content Editor count toward your user...
2. Click "+Assignment" at the top right. 3. Write the assignment title and directions for students. 4. Assign the number of points available for the assignment. 5. Choose an "Assignment Group". Assignment groups are, in essence, a category of assignment. For more information about using Assignment Groups, see the Canvas guides regarding ...
You can create assignments on your calendar, on the modules page, or on the assignments page. Let's create one on the assignments page. Click Assignments. 2. Click the Add Assignment icon. 3. Here you'll enter some basic information to get started. Begin by typing a Name for your assignment.
STEP BY STEP PROCESS WITH EXAMPLESThis Canvas online tutorial video explains how to create assignments, how they function, and how you grade them using speed...
Do you know how to post an assignment in Canvas? Tammy Neil shares the basics.Join some of our expert customers and Canvas Advocates as they help the #Canvas...
Canvas Assignments are a way for instructors to provide students opportunities to practice using the knowledge and skills they have gained or to assess student performance related to such knowledge and skills.(Creating an Assignment is the only way to create a new column in the Gradebook.). In Canvas there are four basic Submission Types for assignments.
A second common source of confusion is how to create gradebook columns. In Canvas, assignments are tightly integrated with the Gradebook and the only way to create a gradebook column is to create and publish an assignment.This may seem unintuitive at first glance, as not all assignments require online submissions (e.g. attendance and participation or assignments done on paper).
Sort Canvas Discussion Board posts according to date; Collapse the Canvas Discussion Board replies; View Canvas Discussion Board in split screen format; Take an assessment or complete an assignment in Canvas 7. Submit an assignment in Canvas; Use the Rich Text editor to submit a Canvas assignment; View comments left on a Canvas assignment
In Canvas, any activity with an associated point value is considered an Assignment and will appear on the Assignments page, as well as in the gradebook. Assignment formats include quizzes, discussions, online document submission, and no submission, and external tool assignments. You can give an assignment to everyone in the course or target it ...
Your Assignments page will show the work you have assigned. In student view, the Assignments page will show all assigned work and the point value of each (if you set point values when setting up an assignment). Any graded activity (such as a discussion, quiz, essay or project) can be an assignment. When you create an assignment in your Canvas ...
Creating Group Assignments. To create an assignment that the students will submit as part of a group, check the box for "This is a Group Assignment" in the Group Assignment area. Understand groups in Canvas. Configuring Peer Reviews. Use the peer review option to pair students up with a partner to review and provide feedback of their work.
This is a great option for course assignments that involve a template or worksheet for students to complete. To create a Cloud Assignment in Canvas using a Google Drive file: Navigate to "Assignments" using the left-hand navigation menu. Click the "+ Assignment" button, and add your new Assignment's name, description, point value, and group.
This student tutorial shows how to complete and submit a Google Slides assignment on Canvas.
Tasks for Canvas
To create an assignment shell, locate an assignment group and click the Add Assignment button [2]. Assignment shells only include fields for the assignment type, name, due date (optional), and points. You can add assignment details at any time by editing the assignment.
Submit Website URL. Type or copy and paste the URL into the Website URL field [1]. Click the Submit Assignment button [2]. You can submit assignments from Google Drive, Dropbox, or another third-party service by sharing the file, copying the URL, and submitting as a website URL.
OpenStax ... Astronomy 2e
In Gradebook on Canvas, the "complete/incomplete" grades show as nice, green checkmarks. Perfect! But when I download the grades, the checkmarks show up as zeros, as you can see in the image. ... When you set up an assignment in Canvas with a "Complete/Incomplete" designation, you can also specify the total number of points possible for the ...
If your instructor allows file uploads as a submission type, you can upload a file from your computer as an assignment submission. Canvas converts specific file types as previews and supports certain media file uploads.. Files uploaded using the Rich Content Editor count toward your user storage quota.
In Assignments, you can view all the assignments in your course. By default, assignments are grouped by overdue assignments, upcoming assignments, undated assignments, and past assignments. Overdue Assignments: assignments and discussions that are past the due date, are still available, have not been submitted, and have not been graded.
In the Inbox, you can send a message to one user or multiple users in a course. If your recipient list contains more than 100 users, your message will automatically be sent as individual messages to each user. As the sender, you will also be included in the total recipient count. Learn more about th...