Canvas LMS · Faculty Guide

Canvas
Quick-Start Guide

Everything you need to get your course site live, your syllabus published, and your students ready to go — in about 15 minutes.

This guide covers
📋 Canvas Adoption Policy requirements
🚀 Publishing your course in 5 steps
📄 Syllabus options (Simple Syllabus & upload)
📊 Gradebook setup & grade passback
🔗 Zoom, Panopto, Turnitin integrations
🆕 New Quizzes migration (deadline: May 31)
📌

Canvas Adoption Policy: UT requires all organized undergraduate and graduate courses with five or more enrolled students to publish a course site and syllabus in Canvas by the first day of class each semester.

Full policy ↗
⚠️

Action Required — Classic Quizzes Retiring May 31, 2026

Instructure is retiring Classic Quizzes on May 31. All quiz content must be migrated to New Quizzes before this date. ET's Canvas team has published a step-by-step migration guide with automatic question conversion tools. Most question types migrate automatically; file upload and essay questions require manual review. View the migration guide →

Getting Started

Course Setup in 5 Steps

Follow these steps at the start of each semester to meet Canvas Adoption Policy requirements and give students a complete, ready-to-use course site.

1
Log in to Canvas with your UT EID
⏱ 1 min

Canvas uses UT Single Sign-On — no separate Canvas password needed. Your courses for the current and upcoming semester appear automatically on the Dashboard once they're available in the course scheduling system.

Open Canvas ↗ 💡 Bookmark utexas.instructure.com
2
Publish your syllabus
⏱ 3–5 min

UT policy requires your syllabus to be posted in Canvas by the first day of class. You have two UT-approved options:

Alternative
File Upload
Upload a PDF or Word document to the Files section. Important: the filename must include the word "syllabus" (e.g., syllabus-sp26.pdf) for the policy requirement to be met.
ℹ️ FERPA note: Do not post student grades or personally identifiable information in the syllabus
3
Publish your course site
⏱ 1 min

New courses are unpublished by default — students can't see the site until you publish it. Once your syllabus and at least a basic structure are in place, publish from the course home page.

Go to your course home page in Canvas
Click the Publish button in the top-right sidebar (it will turn green)
Students are immediately notified via their Canvas notifications
💡 You can unpublish and republish at any time before the semester ends
4
Set up your gradebook
⏱ 5 min

Canvas Gradebook is the only FERPA-approved tool for communicating course grades electronically to students at UT. Configuring it before the semester starts prevents grade-access issues later.

Navigate to Grades in your course left-nav
Create Assignment Groups (e.g., Exams 40%, Homework 30%, Participation 30%) to match your syllabus weighting
Set your grading scheme: Points, Percentage, or Letter Grade (Settings → Course Details → Grading Scheme)
Enable Grade Posting Policy — choose Manual (recommended) or Automatic posting for assignments
If using an external gradebook, configure grade passback under Settings → Integrations
Canvas Instructor Guide ↗ ⚠️ Canvas Gradebook (not email) is required for FERPA-compliant grade communication
5
Add your first week's content & announcements
⏱ 5 min

Students look at Canvas the moment a course is published. Even a single Module with your Week 1 materials and a welcome Announcement creates a strong first impression and reduces support emails.

Go to Modules+ Module → name it "Week 1" or "Getting Started"
Add items: Pages (readings), Assignments, links to Zoom sessions, or Panopto recordings
Post a Welcome Announcement (Announcements → + Announcement) introducing yourself and the course
Optionally, import content from a prior semester: Settings → Import Course Content
💡 Import copies content only — it does not affect your original course or prior grades

Canvas Tools

Key Features for Faculty

Canvas has a lot of functionality. These are the tools most faculty use week-to-week.

📦
Modules
Organize course content into weekly or topic-based containers. Modules create a clear learning path — students move through them in order or access freely depending on your settings.
→ Best practice: one Module per week or unit
📝
Assignments
Create submissions for papers, projects, file uploads, or media recordings. Assignments auto-populate the gradebook and can be connected to SpeedGrader for inline annotation and feedback.
→ SpeedGrader supports rubrics and audio/video feedback
💬
Discussions
Facilitate asynchronous conversations with threaded or focused discussion boards. Supports graded discussions that feed directly into the gradebook, including peer-review options.
→ Use anonymous discussions to increase participation
📣
Announcements
Push time-sensitive messages to all enrolled students. Announcements appear on students' Canvas Dashboard and trigger email/push notifications based on their notification preferences.
→ Schedule announcements in advance for key dates
📄
Pages
Build rich text content pages with embedded video, files, links, and formatted text. Pages are ideal for lecture notes, reading guides, lab instructions, and course policies.
→ Pages can be locked until a specific date or Module completion
📊
New Quizzes
Build assessments with multiple question types: multiple choice, matching, fill-in-the-blank, hot spot, stimulus, and ordering. Supports question banks, time limits, and accommodations.
→ Classic Quizzes retires May 31, 2026 — migrate now

UT-Licensed Integrations

Tools That Connect to Canvas

These UT-licensed tools integrate directly into Canvas — no separate account setup required. Access them via External Tools in the course left-nav or within Assignments.

Zoom
Schedule and host synchronous class sessions directly from Canvas. Student roster is auto-populated; no meeting links to distribute manually.
Find in: Course Nav → Zoom
Panopto
Lecture capture and video hosting. Recordings from Zoom or classroom capture auto-post to your course's Panopto folder. Students stream inside Canvas.
Find in: Course Nav → Panopto Media
Turnitin
AI-assisted originality and academic integrity checking. Create a Turnitin Assignment and submissions are automatically checked. Similarity reports are visible to instructors and (optionally) students.
Find in: Assignment → Submission Type → External Tool → Turnitin
Respondus Lockdown Browser
Locks the student's browser during an online exam, preventing tab-switching or search. Respondus Monitor adds optional AI-based webcam proctoring.
Find in: Quiz Settings → Require Respondus LockDown Browser
LinkedIn Learning
Assign specific LinkedIn Learning courses or videos as course content. Students access with their UT EID — no LinkedIn subscription needed. Completion data can feed into Canvas Assignments.
Find in: Modules → + Item → External Tool → LinkedIn Learning
UT Spark (AI Assistant)
UT's institutional Claude-powered AI assistant. Can be linked from Canvas course pages as a supplemental tool. Faculty can set context guidelines for course-specific use.
UT Sage (Claude)
UT's enterprise Anthropic Claude assistant. Ideal for long-context document analysis, grant writing support, course material review, and nuanced academic writing tasks. Available to all UT EID holders.

University Policy

Canvas Adoption Policy — What's Required

Adopted by the Office of the Executive Vice President and Provost. Applies to all organized courses with five or more enrolled students.

Minimum Canvas Presence Requirements Full policy on Provost website ↗

What you must do by the first day of class

  • Publish your Canvas course site so it is visible to enrolled students
  • Post your syllabus using the Simple Syllabus tool or as a file upload with "syllabus" in the filename

Automatic exceptions (no request needed)

  • Courses offered for zero credits
  • Individual instruction courses (Practicum, Independent Study, Private Lesson, Thesis, Dissertation, Individualized Instruction, Clinical Individualized Instruction)
  • Organized courses with fewer than five students enrolled as of the first day of class

Other exceptions

  • Subject to approval of the Chair and Dean of the instructor's department and College, School, or Unit (CSU)
  • Submit a Policy Exception Request for review by Academic Affairs

Need help with compliance?

  • Contact the Office of Academic Technology at oat@utexas.edu
  • Drop in during Canvas team Office Hours
  • Attend a Canvas workshop (see Training & Learning)
FERPA & Canvas: University email and Canvas Conversations/Inbox are not approved methods for communicating specific course grades. Use Canvas Gradebook or Canvas SpeedGrader for grade communication. Microsoft Teams, UT Box, and other tools approved under IRUSP may also be used for grade-related communication when encrypted end-to-end. Contact the Information Security Office for questions about approved tools.

Support

Get Help with Canvas

💬
Canvas Team & Office Hours
ET's Canvas specialists are available for drop-in office hours during the first weeks of each semester, and by appointment year-round. Ideal for setup questions, gradebook configuration, and integration help.
oat@utexas.edu →
🎓
Workshops & Training
Live workshops on Canvas basics, New Quizzes migration, Turnitin setup, and advanced gradebook features. Available in-person and via Zoom throughout the academic year.
View Training Schedule →
📚
Canvas Instructor Community
Instructure's official documentation and community forum covers every Canvas feature in depth. Search by topic or browse the Instructor Guide for step-by-step walkthroughs.
Canvas Instructor Guide ↗
🎫
Submit a Help Ticket
For urgent or complex issues — broken integrations, grade sync problems, course access issues — submit a ticket through ServiceNow. Canvas tickets are routed to ET's Canvas support team.
ServiceNow ↗