This page features answers to common questions about the transition from ReggieNet to Canvas. It is designed only as a basic guide. Faculty and staff are encouraged to contact the Center for Integrated Professional Development at ProDev@ilstu.edu or (309) 438-2542 for further assistance.
Updated 07/25/23
See the full project timeline on the NextLMS website.
Instructors, staff, and students can access Canvas now through Canvas.IllinoisState.edu. Canvas courses can also be accessed through the Academics tab in the My.IllinoisState.edu portal.
Instructors with summer courses have the choice to use either Canvas or ReggieNet. Canvas will be used for all courses starting in the fall of 2023 and onwards.
ReggieNet will be switched into a “read-only” mode on Friday, August 18, 2023. This means no new information can be uploaded to ReggieNet. However, all instructors will still be able to access past courses and download files until Thursday, November 30, 2023.
Canvas will be the sole, officially supported learning management system for Illinois State starting with the Fall 2023 semester.
Outreach to students will begin in earnest over the summer months leading up to the start of the new academic year. Students with questions about Canvas can always contact the Technology Support Center.
Check out this series of guides specifically designed to get you started building a Canvas course, whether you’re using an old course migrated from ReggieNet or building a new course from scratch.
Instructors and academic support staff will have several options:
The blank course sites in ReggieNet or Canvas are commonly called “shells.” As in past years with ReggieNet, instructors won’t see their course shells in Canvas until they are assigned to the course by their academic department. If you expect to teach in the summer or fall but don’t have a course shell yet, you can request a temporary sandbox site. This option is open to all instructors, including graduate students with a teaching assistantship for fall but have not yet been assigned to specific course sections.
No. Course “shells,” the blank templates provided before every semester for each assigned course, will only be created in Canvas for the fall of 2023 and onward. All instructors should plan on creating their Fall 2023 courses in Canvas, with the option to use content from previous semesters’ courses, if needed.
Just like ReggieNet, students cannot view a Canvas course site until the instructor publishes the course. In addition, students will not see a course site more than 30 days before the first day of a given semester, even if the instructor has published the site.
Instructors have two options: Backup or Migration.
Backup is the best option for most situations, and it can be done by you right now. You can download documents, gradebook information, quizzes (including question pools), and other types of files from your ReggieNet course sites and save them on your Illinois State OneDrive. You can later upload only what you need into Canvas’s centralized Files system and begin building out your Fall 2023 “course shells” at your leisure once those become available. Visit the Center for Integrated Professional Development’s Canvas support hub to get started.
Migration takes a whole ReggieNet course and converts its structure into a format usable by Canvas. This is a complicated solution best suited for courses that use a lot of tools or include a lot of assessments. Once the course is migrated, you will need to make additional changes to align the course content with how various tools work in Canvas. You will then import the data from the migrated course into your Fall 2023 course shell, much in the same way you populate new ReggieNet courses with previous ones.
It depends on your teaching needs, which may vary from course to course.
ReggieNet and Canvas are two different systems, and it is impossible to engineer a foolproof 1:1 conversion between the two. Moreover, Canvas has different tools. Some pilot instructors, especially those who wanted to take advantage of Canvas’ advanced features, found it easier to back up items and populate their new Canvas courses themselves.
In addition, migration does not transfer any student data. So, instructors wishing to keep an old course for the purposes of saving grades or student submissions, such as essays or portfolios, will need to back up those items instead. In fact, student data has never lasted forever in ReggieNet. Students and their work are removed from ReggieNet course sites after they leave the University, and their accounts are retired.
Despite those caveats, migration may be the best option if you make extensive use of the Assignments, Lessons, Tests & Quizzes, or Discussions tools in your ReggieNet courses.
You can request to have older, for-credit ReggieNet courses (i.e., courses with catalog numbers) migrated using this form.
One reason for moving from ReggieNet to Canvas is to allow better third-party tool integrations with our learning management system. Canvas is a popular, widely used platform, and many developers target their tools to use it. An updated list of currently available integrations, often called LTIs, is maintained by the Technology Support Center. In addition, a process is being designed to allow instructors to request new integrations, which need to be vetted by University technical and information security staff.
In short, yes. Many of the commonly used tools on campus were tested now as a part of the Spring 2023 pilot program.
No. Microsoft is making significant changes to how Stream works. In response, the University has decided to purchase Canvas Studio, a video solution integrated into the learning management system itself. Canvas Studio will provide users with the ability to upload or natively record videos, process them for accessibility, and make them available to students in a way that complies with FERPA and TEACH Act regulations.
The University has purchased Canvas Studio to replace Stream for teaching. Learn more about using Canvas Studio and transferring videos to this new platform on the Canvas Studio support page.
From the instructor’s perspective, grade submission will be handled very similarly to how it has happened with ReggieNet. Instructors will access the reporting system (Campus Solutions/Faculty Center for final grades). Instructors will be given the option to import grades from Canvas into the system.
These are complicated processes behind the scenes, and work continues on them. It’s anticipated to be completed in time for summer final grade reporting in early August 2023.
Yes, and the process is much improved over the experience with ReggieNet. Instructors can connect multiple courses by following the steps in this help guide.
Some ReggieNet sites are not tied to courses but were created to support departmental programs, special training programs, or registered student organizations. In Canvas, these are called “Special Use Sites.” These sites do have some limitations, however-- for example, Canvas Special Use sites can only be used by current Illinois State students or employees. Alternatives, such as Microsoft Teams, are available, which may better fit users needs.
Site owners can explore options on the Special Use Sites page.