Video use in education, especially in online and flipped classrooms, enables you to create engaging learning experiences for your students. The UD Capture service enhancements will allow you to create a video quiz to embed any number of questions into your videos so that you can increase your student participation in the viewing process and collect useful learning data. To create an audio quiz you must have an existing video in your course. Creating the quiz will create a separate asset with the video that you choose as its source. You can use either the My Media or Media Gallery tools to create your video quiz. if you use My Media, you will need to publish the quiz to the appropriate course. If you use Media Gallery, the quiz will be published to the current course. Let's look at Media Gallery. To create a quiz you will need to add new media. Select to add a new asset which is a video quiz. And choose the video that you would like to use as the quiz source. Once you are in the quiz builder review the quiz settings. On the Details tab, you can set the quiz name, the welcome message, choose whether or not you will allow students to download a question list prior to viewing the video, and configure your instructions. On this course tab, you can choose whether or not students will see their scores, and incorrect or correct answers. And finally on the experience tab, you can choose whether or not students can edit their answers or whether or not you allow a skip for now button to be displayed as they view the video. Once you are ready to insert your questions, play the video and press pause where you want to insert a question. You can also use the time line at the bottom of the screen to move to a different place in the video where you would like to insert your question. It's good practice to plan your video quiz and include some pauses in your video, so that the video quiz flows nicely. You can insert multiple choice questions, true false questions, and reflection points. For multiple choice questions, enter your question text and up to four answer options. Students can only select one correct answer, but the answers will always be presented to you with the correct answer being the first one. So if you want to reorder the answer options, drag and drop them around or use the shuffle button. You can also add a hint to give students while they're answering the question, or you can add a correct answer feedback to explain why the correct answer was correct. Once your are done, save your question. For true false questions, insert your question text, and choose which answer is correct - true or false. For true false questions, you can also insert a hint and give that feedback. You can also insert a reflection point. A reflection point will automatically pause the video and display the text. Reflection points are useful when you want to draw your viewer's attention back to your video or when you want to highlight a particular topic currently in your video. Down here you can preview your video quiz at any time. It's good practice if you really want to ensure students are watching the entire video to include a question near the end. Your questions are going to depend on your content and your goals for the video quiz, but best practice suggests that the question should not be too difficult but answerable by a student who is paying attention to the video. Once you're happy, click done. Just like any other video you can view analytics. Select your video and scroll down to the actions menu. Choose the analytics option. If this were just a video, you would only see these first three tabs - Dashboard, Media Gallery, and Users - but since this is a video quiz, you also see Quiz Questions and Quiz Users. Quiz Questions will give you information based on the questions in your video quiz. Quiz Users will give you information based on the users who took your video quiz. The integration with Canvas allows you to embed these video quizzes into both modules and assignments. If you embed them them into assignments, you can also transfer the grading information to your Canvas gradebook. So, for example, if I create an assignment, and said it was 10 points, and said this was an external tool type of submission because that's how you get that link to your video quiz. So it's external tool, I'm going to go out and find which tool I want to use. I want to use this Kaltura video quiz option, so that's what I'm going to select. And then it will open up a window into my Media Gallery in order for me to select the video quiz. And I can go ahead and save and publish. Now what will happen is when students actually go out and take this video quiz, the percentage that they earn on their video quiz will be transferred to the point value of the assignment. So say, for example, a student earned 80 percent on the video quiz. Because the assignment was worth 10 points, they would receive 8 points in the Canvas gradebook. Hopefully that answer some of the questions about what you can do with video quizzes. If you have additional questions about UD Capture in Canvas contact the Canvas team at canvas-info@udel.edu or stop by the Faculty Commons in Pearson 116 to consult with an instructional designer.
UD Capture in Canvas: Video Quizzes
From Beth Cartwright January 16, 2019
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Looking to add video quizzes to your Canvas course? This video
describes how to make a video quiz, the question types available, and
how to embed a video quiz in a Canvas assignment to transfer results to
your gradebook.
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