Year in Review 2021-2022

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YEAR IN REVIEW

Aug. 23 marked the official launch of Canvas for the campus community. The transition involved collaboration with students, administrators and faculty. Eleanor Kay/The Ithacan

ITHACA COLLEGE COMMUNITY ADJUSTS TO SWITCH T O N E W L E A R N I N G M A N A G E M E N T S Y S T E M C A N VA S

S

BY SYD PIERRE

ome members of the campus community are still adjusting to Ithaca College’s new learning management system (LMS), Canvas, following the end of the college’s 10-year contract with Sakai. The process to switch LMSs started approximately a year ago, Chief Information Officer David Weil said. The transition involved collaboration with multiple groups across campus, including students and faculty. Aug. 23 marked the official launch of Canvas for the campus community. “Early last fall, we started to have conversations when we knew that Sakai had been around for nine or 10 years, and we felt ... that Sakai was probably not going to be the right learning management platform for us as an institution,” Weil said. During the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, the college transitioned to a mix of remote and hybrid learning from Spring 2020 to Spring 2021. This forced students and faculty to rely on Sakai more. Jenna Linskens, director for learning and innovative technologies and executive committee co-chair of the LMS Governance Committee, said Sakai had a lot of limitations and required a lot of involvement from the Department of Information Technology (IT) at the college. “It was a very challenging system and it was costing the institution quite a significant amount of money to maintain that system and to have the staffing to support it,” Linskens said. Students at the college also had issues with

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Sakai, namely the organization and layout of the LMS. Weil said that the college created a group during Fall 2020 with representatives from across the college — including the Student Governance Council, administrators from the Office of the Provost, members of the Center for Faculty Excellence, students and faculty — to assess what LMS would be best for the college. Matt Clauhs, assistant professor of music education and co-chair of the LMS Governance Committee, said the committee talked to other colleges that had transitioned away from Sakai and narrowed down the search to different possibilities before deciding on Canvas in early December 2020. Weil said the college signed a 10-year contract with Instructure, the developer and publisher of Canvas, in January 2021 and started the implementation process in the spring semester with pilot programs. “Some institutions take longer to do the implementation,” Weil said. “Some do it in the same timeline we did. We really felt it was important to do this fairly quickly. But I don’t think that meant that we did it any less thoroughly. We had a lot of people involved in the process along the way.” According to an article from eLearning Inside, the process to switch from an existing LMS to Canvas can take on average two years because institutions consult with all stakeholders and participate in a pilot study. In addition, the migration of old materials to Canvas can take six months to a year and a half on average. Clauhs said that he piloted Canvas over the summer with graduate students in the music education program and that the students found it to be very user-friendly.

Junior Daisy Codallos-Silva said that this semester has been her first time using Canvas and that she has been finding the platform difficult to navigate but is looking forward to learning more about it. “I’m kind of embracing it as a new thing,” Codallos-Silva said. “But I’ve just been playing around with it, hoping to get the hang of it.” Sophomore Ryan Griswold said he also thought the switch to Canvas has been difficult. “It’s not like Sakai, where you could just click on something and it would be right there,” Griswold said. “There’s different tabs for each link.” Linskens said Canvas offers a mobile app for students and faculty to use, as well as a higher level of customer support than Sakai. Canvas offers Canvas Support, a separate chat function in which users can type in their questions and correspond with a Canvas representative in minutes. She said Canvas Support allows IT at the college to refocus its efforts elsewhere, rather than answer questions about Canvas. “It also is a time saver for faculty and students to be able to get their question answered within a matter of minutes, rather than waiting a whole day or more for somebody to get back to them,” Linskens said. Clauhs said he found Canvas Support helpful when transitioning his materials over from Sakai to Canvas. “I’ve probably used it at least 20 times where I’m working on a problem and a representative from Canvas is able to assist me, usually within minutes of a request,” he said. “The college invested in making that 24/7 support available to faculty and students and I think it’s been really useful in this transition.”


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Articles inside

Football Head Coach Leaves

4min
page 146

New Football Head Coach

3min
pages 147-151

Women’s Cross Country Captain 144–145 Equestrian Club

10min
pages 143-145

Gender Equity Gap

5min
page 142

Club Sports

5min
page 140

Editorial: Limited Club Sports Funding

4min
page 141

Basketball Guard 1,000 Career Points

3min
page 136

Sprinter Breaks 60-Meter Dash Record

4min
page 135

Football Kicker Travels Country

6min
page 134

All-Americans

5min
page 133

Editorial: 63rd Cortaca Jug Sparks Concerns

5min
page 131

IC Athletes Attend NCAA Convention

4min
page 132

Shang-Chi

3min
page 116

Cortaca Jug 2022 Venue

3min
page 130

Tick, Tick ... Boom

3min
page 115

Dune

3min
page 114

Super Hearts Day Nerf Event 104–105 State and National Parks

17min
pages 103-107

Encanto

3min
page 113

Editorial: Cons of NFTs

4min
page 111

NFT Trend

3min
page 110

The Milkstand

5min
pages 108-109

Campus Hip-Hop Culture

4min
page 102

Astrology

5min
page 96

School of Music Mental Health Group 98–99 Via’s Cookies

10min
pages 97-101

Pellet Gun Shootings

5min
pages 91-95

Shots-Fired Incident

3min
page 89

Pandemic Budget Cuts 86–91 SAFETY

5min
pages 85-86

Spring Semester Reopening

4min
page 84

Two Swastikas Discovered

5min
page 87

Testing Options

4min
page 83

Surveillance Testing

3min
page 82

Editorial: Mask Mandate Removal

4min
page 81

Indoor Mask Mandate Dropped

4min
page 80

Quarantine Regulations

4min
page 79

Booster Shots

4min
page 78

Synagogue Hostage Crisis Response

5min
page 72

In-Person Fall Classes

4min
page 77

Afghan Refugees

9min
pages 73-76

Reproductive Rights Rally 68–69 Ithaca Decarbonization Plan

20min
pages 67-71

Trader K’s Closing

4min
page 66

Acting Mayor Laura Lewis

4min
page 65

Gentrifcation

4min
page 64

Day of Learning: Grappling with Antisemitism

5min
pages 61-62

Mayor Svante Myrick Resigns

4min
page 63

Campus Climate Initiative

5min
page 60

Commentary: College Fails Students of Color

6min
page 59

Understaffng

5min
page 57

Health Support & Services

4min
page 58

Mouse Sightings

4min
page 56

Commentary: Free Public Transportation

5min
page 55

Inflation

2min
page 54

Center for IDEAS Director

8min
pages 48-50

Zine Addresses Rape Culture

4min
page 52

Student Veteran Support

4min
page 51

Presidential Search

3min
page 44

President La Jerne Cornish

4min
page 46

AAUP Calls for Transparency

5min
page 45

Reaction to 10th President

5min
page 47

Dean Searches

12min
pages 41-43

Editorial: Music Theater School Merger

5min
page 35

Alumni Donations

5min
page 31

Opera Director Program

4min
page 33

Commentary: Course Registration

10min
pages 37-40

Tuition Increase

3min
page 36

Sakai to Canvas

4min
page 32

August & September

2min
page 11

Academic Program Prioritization Phase Two

4min
page 34
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