Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:You all sound ridiculous with this "My kid's school has been hit!!" stuff. Like there are missiles landing or something.
Canvas is down everywhere. And it isn't the end of the world. And I say this as someone giving an exam tomorrow that requires the students to long onto Canvas and take a timed quiz. If we can't do it, we'll figure out what to do. We all managed to learn things before Canvas came along, and we'll continue to do so tomorrow.
But how???
How exactly are you going to post assignments, provide grades & feedback and communicate with your students?
You went to college before these things existed and somehow, professors were able to do this stuff.
Thankfully, higher ed faculty are smart people who have above average critical thinking skills and will be able to tough this one out. lol
Are you the professor who posted before? Or are you just thinking you can speak on behalf of faculty? Canvas being down for multiple days would have absolutely been a problem. What alternative method do you have for securely and privately posting grades that doesn’t involve significantly more work at a very busy time in the semester? Universities are requiring faculty to do everything in the LMS now. They aren’t simultaneously maintaining some sort of alternative system. Think about courses that use the discussion board or third party tools integrated into Canvas.
Maybe you’re one of those bad professors who just gives a midterm and a final with minimal feedback, leaving students to wonder how they’re doing in a course until the very end. Most are highly dependent on having access to the LMS to manage student feedback and grades, because that’s what their institutions have essentially forced on them.