
February 2026
Last chance to join the Digital Accessibility Challenge
A 10-week Digital Accessibility Challenge is going on right now through the end in April 2026. When you sign up for this challenge, you get a weekly email helping you focus on one area of accessibility strategies for your digital content. You are then encouraged to spend about an hour or two revising your digital content with that weekly concept in mind. This program will help you take steps each week towards meeting the April 2026 ADA deadline. To participate, sign up for this challenge by February 28. Participants will receive 1,000 Wellbeing Points at the conclusion of the challenge.
Canvas updates
ePortfolios marked as Legacy
Canvas ePortfolios are now labeled Legacy in Account navigation. There is also a banner in ePortfolios announcing that the product will sunset June 30, 2026. A new and improved Canvas Portfolios is near release. We will provide guidance and support to help you transition to the new product which has a richer feature set. The new Canvas Portfolios moves beyond Showcase Portfolios and will include Evaluation Portfolios within a course context.
Icons to indicate assignment status in the Gradebook
The Canvas Gradebook has an option to View status for colorblindness in the View Options tab in Gradebook Settings. Enabling the feature adds icons in addition to color to assignments that are Missing, Late, or Excused.
Kaltura updates
Updated guidance for students taking Kaltura Video Quizzes
If you use a Kaltura Video Quiz in a Canvas assignment, in rare cases the student’s video quiz score doesn’t get sent to the Canvas Gradebook. The main causes of this failure are when individual students take longer than four hours to complete the video quiz (including starting and stopping throughout the day) or when they start the video quiz on one device and finish it on another. OIT staff is working with the vendor to increase the number of hours a video quiz can be used. In general, include the following instructions for students:
- Complete your quiz in one sitting in less than four hours.
- During the video quiz, do not change to another browser or device.
Zoom updates
Third-party AI applications soon to be blocked in Zoom
To maintain information security and data privacy, the University of Minnesota will update Zoom and Google Workspace beginning Thursday, February 26th to block a number of unlicensed third-party AI applications. Examples of unlicensed third-party AI applications to be blocked include Fireflies.ai, Otter.ai, Read.ai, OpenAI (ChatGPT), and xAI (Grok). Once this block is in place, these tools will no longer be able to
- Join UMN Zoom meetings
- Integrate with UMN Google Drives and Calendar.
If you have used any of these tools in the past, read more details on this change in the IT news article.
Making course content digitally accessible: An interview with Dr. Vanessa Lee
With the April 2026 compliance deadline approaching, instructors at the University are revising their course materials to meet the updated digital accessibility policy. In this interview, Dr. Vanessa Lee, Professor of Psychology in the College of College of Liberal Arts, Twin Cities campus shares her experience. Read Extra Points, Making course content digitally accessible: An interview with Dr. Vanessa Lee to hear how instructors are navigating efforts to make their digital content accessible.
Canvas site design that works: Principles from Hall of Fame award recipients
March 25, 2026; 2–3 p.m. (via Zoom)
Learn to leverage your Canvas course site to promote student success. Drawing inspiration from Canvas Course Site Hall of Fame recipients, this session will focus on practical steps you can take to make your course site work for you and your students. Key takeaways include how to organize your Canvas content logically, maximizing the utility of your Home Page as a home base for all resources, and effective practices for ensuring ease of use and digital accessibility. Register for this session to learn effective practices in course site design.
Spotlight
Tap into professional video production services for your course content
Video specialists in Academic Technology Support Services (ATSS) are available to all instructors of academic courses at no cost. They assist in creating professional-quality academic videos for teaching and learning, such as lecture recording, interviews, and on-site demonstrations. ATSS video production services provide you with the help you need to take your content and make it into professional, polished video content for you to use time and time again:
- Pre-recording consultation
- Guidance on how to add/use videos in Canvas courses
- Guidance on YouTube and Kaltura use
- Editing
- Accurate captions for accessibility
Wondering if turning some course content into video is right for you? Here are the answers to some common questions about getting started.
What professional video production tools does ATSS provide?
ATSS video specialists have the technology to make and edit your video content for any discipline.
- Gopher Glass is a large piece of glass that is illuminated by small LED lights and mounted to an adjustable height table. It allows instructors to diagram and convey complex information, similar to a whiteboard used in classroom spaces. Read College of Science and Engineering Professors Victor Barocas’ and Seonkyoo Yoon’s perspectives about their experiences with using Gopher Glass to create content for their courses.
- Two recording studios located on the West Bank and East Bank campuses provide full service recording and editing with green screen background capabilities, studio lighting, and professional quality sound recording.
- Other production options are available for all campuses.
Which course content is best for formal, produced video?
Producing video content for your course does take time and effort. Even though an ATSS video specialist will guide you through the process and handle the technical aspects of the production, you will need to spend ample time preparing for your recording sessions. Because of this time commitment, ATSS video specialists recommend some key principles when deciding what to use for academic videos:
- Focus on investing your time where it yields the most return: with your established content. Keeping newer content informal ensures you have the freedom to pivot as needed.
- Choose evergreen content. This is material you create once and use over and over. Investing extra time and effort creating videos that remain relevant will save you time in the long run.
How do I prepare?
The overall goal of ATSS’ video services is to have a video specialist do the heavy lifting with the technologies and tools to make a high-quality video so that you can focus on what you do best: presenting your information. That said, once you begin the request process for making an academic video, a video specialist will talk you through the specific steps to prepare for your specific project. A high-level overview for most projects include the following steps:
- Identifying the unit, the lesson, and how many sub-lessons you wish to record.
- Chunking the video content into 5-7 minute sections. Read more about how to chunk your content to prepare for video production.
- Preparing for a video recording in a studio setting.
- Approving needed video edits made by the video specialist.
- Implementing your video into a Canvas course site.
How much time will it take?
It depends. Determine when you need to have the video ready for your students and work backward from there to calculate your timeline. Some items to consider:
- Is your slide deck ready to go, or do you need to make revisions?
- Are you doing this work yourself? Or are you enlisting support from others? If working with others, consider their production capacity and timelines.
- Give yourself at least a month to plan and record.
Explore the various user stories and video examples from other instructors who have used ATSS’s video specialist services:
- Use Demonstration Videos to Increase Student Confidence in Handling Lab Equipment
- Capture Guest Experts on Video for Future Use
- Flipping your classroom: A Conversation with Victor Barocas
- Various ATSS video production examples
Request a consultation with a video production specialist today.
Additional Resources
- Request a teaching with technology consultation at [email protected]
- ATSS YouTube Channel
- Subscribe to the Teaching with Technology Newsletter
- Extra Points