See more remote resources for connecting from home.
Recent Updates
- Use Microsoft Teams to create channels, host or join meetings, chat, collaborate on Team Files, and more.
- Recording and Privacy Concerns: FAQ answers some frequently asked questions about recording classes and compliance with laws and U-M policies and standards for handling student educational records.
- The International Access to U-M IT Resources page summarizes the cloud-based U-M resources that may not be available from outside the U.S.
- Added a cheat sheet for common tasks when using MiVideo in Canvas to the Deliver Instruction Remotely section.
Deliver Instruction Remotely
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Get started: Consider which activities in a face-to-face class can be translated into an online format, and prepare to move what you can online. A number of resources are available to help you move your instruction online:
- The Keep Teaching @ UM resource includes practical, pedagogical guidance for teaching remotely under different circumstances.
- Review Getting Started with Canvas and Best Practices for Remote Teaching. This document includes steps to create a Canvas course presence, adding content, creating asynchronous lectures, and hosting synchronous sessions.
- Visit ITS Training for live Canvas training opportunities. Daily topics include basic setup, quizzes, gradebook, and more.
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Record lectures for online delivery: Use Kaltura Capture to record lectures for students to view later in Canvas.
- Using Kaltura Capture for Asynchronous Video in Canvas (video, 10:13)
- Editing Content of Videos in My Media on Canvas
- Ordering/Editing Captions in My Media on Canvas
- How to Upload a Video from iOS to Canvas (video, 2:31)
- Creating a Screencast on an iPad (video, 3:22)
- MiVideo in Canvas Cheat Sheet
- Teaching Remotely with Film and Video
Review Recording and Privacy Concerns: FAQ to learn about laws, policies, and standards governing recorded class activity.
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Remote real-time classrooms: Choose from the following videoconferencing services to conduct your lectures and classroom interactions in real time.
- Use Zoom to host a lecture with chat rooms, polling, webinars, and mobile collaboration. For more information, watch Schedule and launch Zoom within Canvas (video, 8:36).
- Use the Conference tool to host a lecture directly in Canvas. For more information, watch Host a Conference Session in Canvas (video, 4:59)
- Use Microsoft Teams to create channels, host or join meetings, chat, collaborate on Team Files, and more.
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Accommodate student needs: Consider how students and faculty with disabilities will be affected by the shift to online instruction. Review remote instruction best practices, and contact [email protected] with questions or to request help from the Accessibility Team at the Office for Institutional Equity and ITS.
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General tips and additional resources for delivering instruction remotely:
- LSA Technology Services’s Guide to Teaching Remotely
- The College of Engineering’s Teaching & Learning resources
- Use headphones or earbuds with a microphone to minimize surrounding noise and maximize your vocal clarity.
Communicate with Students Online
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Announcements: Communicate timely information with students in your class using the Announcements tool in Canvas. Use this tool to send a written message, record and upload a video, and attach files or include links.
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Classroom discussion: Use the Discussions tool in Canvas to allow students to interact and learn from each other online while facilitating the conversation.
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Remote office hours: For real-time interactions with your students, consider using the Chat tool in Canvas or scheduling meetings using Zoom. These tools are useful for scheduled office hours or quick Q&A sessions.
Use the Remote Office Hours Queue to manage a group of students waiting to meet with you during your office hours.
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Email: If you need to email all of your students, and you don’t want to use Canvas, you can get a list of email addresses for all of your students in Wolverine Access.
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General tips for communicating effectively with students online:
- If you plan to use Canvas tools to communicate with your students, make sure your course is published.
- Be consistent with the digital tool selected for online communications, and be sure to post this information in a prominent location, such as the Syllabus page in Canvas.
- Set expectations for how students should engage in online communication, including how they should contact the instructor.
- Set expectations with students for how quickly the instructor will respond to online communication.
Online Assessment
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Assessments: If you need to collect written assignments, use the assignments tool in Canvas to create a place for students to submit their work. Make sure that you indicate the assignment will be submitted online, and choose the “file upload” option for the submission type.
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Quizzes: If you need to administer an online quiz, use the Quiz tool in Canvas. For low-stakes assessment, consider allowing multiple attempts, not including a time limit, and allowing students to see their quiz responses.
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Exams: If you need to administer a high-stakes exam, use the Quiz tool in Canvas and consider shuffling the answer options, using a strict time limit, hiding student quiz responses, and using question groups.
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General tips for conducting online assessments:
- Consider providing extra time on quizzes and exams to students who ask for accommodations in using technology. See instructions for granting extra time to assessments in Canvas.