Recently, Canvas held its first community user
group in the Philippines at the De La Salle University Henry Sy, Sr. Hall. The
meeting connected the first Canvas customers in the Philippines to discuss
their use of education technology to transform education provision in their
institutions. Principals and senior leadership from Baliuag University,
University of the East, Jose Rizal University, De La Salle Lipa, Centro Escolar
University and other schools were present, such as the host College of Computer
Studies department at De La Salle University and EdTech leadership from Far
Eastern University.
The Instructure team. (L-R) Troy Martin, Colt Kwong, Debbie
Thompson, Barrett Doran, Julian Yballe, Faith Chaza
|
Technology has allowed other industries to compete
globally and education is no different, with each institution sharing their
strategic visions of how they can and will use education technology to enhance
teaching and learning as well as compete for students in the region. Through their use of the Learning Management
System Canvas, each of these Philippine institutions are deepening their
adoption of the latest innovations in teaching and learning, such as blended
and flipped classrooms, which allows for greater focus on student engagement
and personalized learning.
Roselle Basa, Program Coordinator for ICT at UE,
was among the attendees who were new to Canvas. UE faculty have been training
with the LMS since March, and the system will be deployed in full this year.
“Canvas allows us to develop courses that are geared to student-centered
strategies. It pushes the envelope of teaching strategies development and helps
us avoid being confined to the classroom in a very enjoyable and engaging
manner,” Basa said.
Canvas from Instructure was created in response to
poor user experience of legacy LMS software by its founders as graduate
students. They wanted a more flexible and personalized learning experience, one
that was mobile and easy to use and extend with a wide variety of learning
resources.
As an open, mobile and native cloud-based platform,
Canvas allows students to easily access learning materials, take online tests,
collaborate on the move, and drive their own learning journey. Teachers are
able to deliver more personalized learning, choose from a wealth of learning
resources to deliver a richer learning experience, grade tests more quickly, as
well as use data in real time to give feedback on student progress. This approach puts teachers and students at
the center of the learning environment rather than the technology.
Regional Director Julian L. Yballe talks about the open nature of Canvas |
Regional Director Julian Yballe also took to the
podium to explain Canvas’ view on openness and equity of experience.
Instructure envisioned Canvas as endlessly extendable open APIs and the ability
to add apps via the LTI standard. This
allows teachers to use the vast global resources that exist, exposing students
to a huge variety of learning materials in a simple and easy way.
Along with this growing partner ecosystem, the
Canvas community of global institutions, helps educators from around the world
share ideas and experiences both online and at community events such as this
user group session. These leading
institutions in the Philippines are now contributing to the community with
their founding of the first user group in South East Asia.
Representatives from De La Salle Lipa at the conference |
Yballe underlined this specific focus on
student-centeredness. “The feedback for Canvas from every stakeholder in this
teacher and learning environment has been positive. And a lot of it is a
combination of timing and how student-centered learning is becoming more of a
focus due to two reasons, workforce preparedness, so graduates can contribute
immediately, and a more competitive environment for a limited number of
students, both locally and globally,” Yballe said.
What’s next on the roadmap for Canvas? APAC VP Troy
Martin spoke of the company’s expansion plans in a post-conference interview.
“We’re excited with the customers that have emerged over the last two years in
the Philippines, particularly here in Manila, but we are excited to welcome
some new institutions from Cebu City and we look forward to hearing from new
institutions contacting Instructure about working with Canvas.”
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