Google files can be shared to view and also be assigned for students to edit their own copy then submit back through Canvas.
Viewing Files
If you only want students to view the file, like a copy of notes or a review answer key, you have a couple of options:
- Add to Modules List as "External Tool"
- Google Drive file
- Accesses only My Drive
- You have to manually change the file's share settings to "Anyone can View" or "Frisco ISD can View"
- Google Drive Course Kit file
- Accesses both My Drive and Share Drives
- Looks like you're adding an Assignment but you're really not
- It changes the share settings for you
- Add within a Page, Assignment, Discussion, Announcement, etc.
- Google Apps file
- Accesses only My Drive
- Manually change the file's share settings so "Anyone can View" or "Frisco ISD can View"
- You select to Embed or Link (hyperlink) the file
- Google Drive Course Kit file
- Accesses both My Drive and Share Drives
- Looks like you're adding an Assignment but you're really not
- It changes the share settings for you
- The file Embeds within the page
Assignments
If you want to use a Google file for students to edit and return as an assignment, there are 2 options:
- Google Cloud Assignments
- Only accesses files in My Drive (not Shared Drives)
- When students open the file, it makes a copy in their own Google Drive that they then edit.
- When students submit, Canvas takes a PDF snapshot of the file for the submission. This means:
- no Version history
- no access to Draftback
- no Google's Originality Checker
- students still have the original doc and can edit
- If students make changes to the doc after it's submitted, you won't see the changes unless they resubmit an new PDF snapshot.
- Google Cloud Assignments can be added in a Blueprint and synced out to the Shell courses
- Can use Canvas Rubrics
- Grade through Canvas with the SpeedGrader
- Google Course Kit Assignments
- Only accesses files in My Drive (not Shared Drives)
- More similar to Google Classroom
- When students open the file, it makes a copy in their own Google Drive that they then edit.
- When students submit, they are turning in the live document which means:
- you can view the Version history
- you can run Draftback on the file
- it includes Google's Originality Checker
- students lose editing rights upon submission
- Students can add multiple files to a single submission.
- If you return the file to students, they can then make changes and you can see the changes as they work.
- If students submit the same file again, it makes a copy of the original file for this submission. They have both copies in their Drive.
- Must be added to the assignment from the Shell course, not in Blueprint.
- Does NOT access Canvas rubrics; uses Google's rubrics
- Grade through Course Kit using Google's grading features
For more, see this comparison chart.
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