Get Started 

This guide will help you quickly prepare  courses. The aim is to assist you as you create instructionally effective and learner-friendly Canvas course sites. Before you get started, read this entire page. Many of the steps we have outlined are connected to each other. 

Are you new to Canvas? Review what you can do in a Canvas course site. Have specific questions about using online tools? See the How do I...page for detailed information.

The Digital Education and Innovation team is available to help you in all stages of course development and teaching. Contact deiteam@umn.edu when you need help. 

Step 1: Determine Course Structure and Organization 


Step 2: Identify and Collect Course Content 

Step 3: Build a Canvas Site  

This document will help familiarize you with using Canvas. 

The following steps will assist you to create a Canvas site that provides a clear student path for interacting with you and the content: 

Step 4: Plan How You and Your Students Will Communicate 

Provide multiple methods for communication to support interaction between the instructor and students and students with each other. Share your communication plan with students as part of your orientation materials. 

Step 5: Create Additional Content For Your Course 

Creating videos of yourself can increase instructor presence and help students feel connected in an online environment or to supplement your work in face to face classrooms. Videos can include announcements, quick summaries, and lecture replacement. Instructional videos do not need high production value to be effective. 

Submit a request to z.umn.edu/cehdhelp if you need software installed on your device.

Considering a class with multiple modalities?

Determine if/when synchronous class sessions using Zoom are necessary. While synchronous class sessions may seem like a logical way to replace a face-to-face class, there are many technical challenges to hosting and presenting in a large group meeting. If your main goal is delivering content, recording a video may be a simpler option. If you do determine a live class session is best the option for you, consider active learning strategies to deepen student understanding of the content. 

Zoom is the University’s video conferencing tool that enables real-time class sessions. All instructors at the University have access. Login at umn.zoom.us

Zoom Recordings

Communicate with students ahead of time about:

Additional Resources

Step 6: Make Course Site and Materials Accessible to All Students 

Become familiar with accessibility best practices to create an inclusive online learning environment for all of your students. Basic accessibility can be achieved in straightforward ways in many of the applications you likely are already familiar with. 

Step 7: Review Course Site for Readiness 

After building your course site, double-check the accuracy and clarity of the following: 

Step 8: Share Your Course With Students 

Once your course site is ready, you will need to publish it and communicate with students.

Communicate expected behaviors and respectful contributions statements (netiquette). 

Step 9: Teaching Strategies for Remote or Hybrid Courses

Teaching remotely requires flexibility, motivation, and discipline for both students and instructors. Online instruction also provides interesting opportunities to engage students in different ways that may be more personal and individualized. 

Step 10: Evaluate Your Canvas Course Site 

Course evaluation and reflection are vital strategies in a continuous improvement process. Combining reflective practices with gathering feedback from students can provide insights into how students experienced your course site, what is working, and what could be improved. 

A. Add a Course Site Evaluation to Gather Feedback from Students  

We recommend that instructors provide students with a way to give feedback on the Canvas course site.  We have created a Canvas course site evaluation using Google Forms. This survey is specific to the Canvas course site and does not overlap with the Student Rating of Teaching. To use the survey:

B. Support Your Reflective Practices with a Course Reflection Log

We have developed a Google Sheet to record your reflections and experiences teaching and working with Canvas during the term. Use this resource to make notes about your course as they happen, which can inform instructional decisions and design revisions in future terms. Adopt a routine of reflecting each week or after grading in order to maximize the potential benefits of this practice. 


A Few Words of Caution 


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