Sample front page with banner / course image. Within a course, Canvas does not have a native use of the banner / course image. As the default Home Page in Canvas is the Modules Index Page, you'd have to change the Home Page to a Front Page and then add a banner image to that Front Page to have a banner on a course's Home Page.
The Front Page is a designation that shows Canvas which page can be used for the Course Home Page. Use this page to show a welcome message, links, images, or other information for students. Before setting the Front Page, the page must be published.
Each Course Home Page can have one of five different layouts depending on your preference. Each Course Home Page layout also includes specific items in the sidebar, in addition to the To Do list. The Course Home Page defaults to the Modules page, but you can change the Course Home Page.
The home page is your first chance to capture new students’ attention and interest in the journey upon which they are about to embark. The course home page is also the first thing students see each subsequent time they visit your course or choose the course’s Home navigation link.
The Front Page is a designation that shows Canvas which page can be used for the Course Home Page. Use this page to show a welcome message, links, images, or other information for students.
Sample Canvas Home Page The Front Page is considered the 'home page' that your students will see when they first enter your course. Below you will find two sample Canvas front pages. You can create your Canvas Front Page by using a table for some visuals and text information.
A course Homepage is the first thing a student sees when logging into your Canvas course. By default, Canvas displays the activity stream messages, but no other content when students arrive in the course.
If you are enrolled in a course as an instructor, the Course Home Page is the first page students see when they open the course. The Home Page also helps students understand how they can navigate through the course. You can customize the Home Page to create a specific workflow for your students.
Your course homepage is the first thing your students see when they arrive at your course in Canvas....Many class homepages have the following four elements, or some subset of them:Cover image.Link to your syllabus file.Class and instructor information.Welcome message.
Choose a page (the course's front page) as the course's homepage:Click on the menu option Pages. You will see a list of all the pages in your course. Click on the three dots at the right of the page, then Use as front page.Go to Home using the main menu. Click on Choose homepage.
How do I create a Front Page and use it as the Home page for my Canvas site?Click Pages.Click Add (+) Page. ... Add a title for the new Page.In the Rich Text Editor box, add the content you want displayed. ... Click Save and Publish.Go back to the Pages tool and click View All Pages.More items...
How do I use the Course Home Page as a student?Open Course. In Global Navigation, click the Courses link [1], then click the name of the course [2].View Course Navigation. The Course Home Page is viewed from the Course Navigation Home link [1]. ... View Content Area. ... View Sidebar.
Pages Front Page This option allows instructors to be a little more creative with their home pages. Selecting this option will set the home page to a default page called "front page" (which comes standard with every course).
1:163:15How to Navigate Canvas as a Student - YouTubeYouTubeStart of suggested clipEnd of suggested clipYour dashboard can be toggled to a course view or a recent activity view and shows notifications forMoreYour dashboard can be toggled to a course view or a recent activity view and shows notifications for all current canvas courses that you're in to look at your courses.
To create and customize your Canvas Home Page: Click the “+ Page” button in the upper right-hand corner. Give your page a name, and start adding content in the Rich Text Editor. You can add different types of content, such as: Text: Use the drooped to select whether the text you're adding is a header or paragraph.
0:341:32How to Link Modules to a Home Page in Canvas - YouTubeYouTubeStart of suggested clipEnd of suggested clipSo to link my modules I'm at my home page I'm going to click Edit. Once the page. Loads. I'm goingMoreSo to link my modules I'm at my home page I'm going to click Edit. Once the page. Loads. I'm going to go down. And select the image icon badge word whatever it is that I want to leave so in this case.
The Pages Front Page allows instructors to design the course home page and include links, images, or rich media. Students will be able to interact with the content added to this page.
Each Course Home Page can have one of five different layouts depending on your preference. Each Course Home Page layout also includes specific items in the sidebar, in addition to the To Do list. The Course Home Page defaults to the Modules page, but you can change the Course Home Page.
Course Modules organizes the course into modules, or sections. Modules helps outline the course and shows the assignments or tasks required throughout the course. You can add modules or module items from the Modules page.
The Course Activity Stream lets users see the most recent activity and interactions for this course. It is very similar to the recent activity stream in the Dashboard but only shows content for the specific course.
The Syllabus may include a description of course expectations or introduce the course with links, images, or other content. The Syllabus also automatically populates a calendar view of all assignments and course events as they are added or modified in the course. The Syllabus can also be viewed in Course Navigation.
Ask your Canvas questions and get help from over a million Community members from around the world.
Learn about upcoming conferences or watch recordings from past events
To add the front page, you first need to create a new page in your course Pages section that will be the front page: Include the following elements in your page, in order: Course information: course number and title, your name, section, etc. (so students know they’re in the right place) A welcome statement. A short introductory paragraph.
A front page is one of the types of pages you can select as the home page your students first see whenever they visit your course. I urge you to create a custom front page as the home page of all online courses.
You can find free images to include with each topic by selecting the Flickr tab when you insert an image into the page. For a more appealing layout, try making the topic list into a table, in which each row is a separate topic.
The welcome statement is a few words in large type that will be the first words your learners see when they visit your course. It should be a warm invitation to participate in the course. It can be as simple as “Welcome!” or “Thank you for joining us!”
Pages store content and educational resources that are part of a course or group but don’t necessarily belong in an assignment . Pages can include text, video, and links to files and other course or group content. Pages can also be linked to other pages.
However, instructors can allow students to edit and contribute to course pages. Students can always create pages in their student group. In groups, students can view the same page layout with the name of the page, creation dates, and edit dates. They can also add new pages in a group [1].
In a course, instructors can create a new page with text, images, media, links, and/or other files [1]. The Options icon [2] allows instructors to edit the title of a page, delete a page, use it as the front page, duplicate the page, send a copy of the page to another instructor at their institution, or copy the page to one of their other courses.
Pages can also be linked to other pages. They can also be used as a collaboration tool for course or group wikis where only specific users can have access. Canvas keeps the entire history of the page to account for changes over time.
Learning Modules are always located within a Content Folder (be it the main "Content" folder or another folder). Learning Modules are more similar to a book than a folder. Still having a name and description on the cover, a Learning Module also has a Table of Contents available for users to navigate through content.
In Blackboard many people use Content Folders to organize their content, whether they are Content Folders in the Course Navigation or on a main Content page. Just like a file folder in a drawer in a desk, the content folder consists of a name and description on the front and any amount of content inside.
In Blackboard, a thread is a conversation, including any branching conversations which occur from students replying to other students' replies. In Canvas, a discussion is a conversation and these replies to replies are considered threads.
A student's ability to attach items to discussion posts can only be set on a course-wide basis rather than being set per discussion. You cannot moderate posts.
Within a course, Canvas does not have a native use of the banner / course image. As the default Home Page in Canvas is the Modules Index Page, you'd have to change the Home Page to a Front Page and then add a banner image to that Front Page to have a banner on a course's Home Page.
Canvas is a bit different. First of all, Canvas' Dashboard can be seen as similar to Blackboard's My Blackboard, with updates from courses and access to those courses.
You cannot grade multiple attempts separately. Additional differences with Assignments in Canvas include: You must make an assignment in order to create a column in the Gradebook. The Assignments Index Page includes all types of assignments (including those using the Assignment tool, Quizzes, and Assignments).