The quiz is part of our existing appeals process, however you should not pay the ticket before taking the quiz. If your ticket is deemed ineligible for cancellation, you will still have the opportunity to appeal the ticket.
If you think you are eligible, take the 24-question parking quiz within 14 calendar days. We'll then verify your eligibility and notify you if we were able to cancel the ticket. We encourage you to study the KU Parking Rules & Regulations and this website before taking the quiz.
Important Note: The Parking Quiz does not apply to citations written for Unpaid Garage Toll, Parking Meters, ADA Stalls, Non-designated Parking, Reserved Stall violations, and Fire Lanes! If you received one of these types of tickets, you can appeal the ticket.
Colon cancer is common and deadly. It can be prevented with screening and is highly treatable when caught early. Most people should start getting checked at age 45. Complete the brief quiz to get screening suggestions based on your risk factors.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit reversed a district court decision that had ruled provisions in the Affordable Care Act (ACA), which provide for no-cost preventive screening for colorectal cancer and other conditions, unconstitutional.
Time Limit [2]: You can choose to set a time limit by entering the number of minutes students have to complete the entire quiz. Timed quizzes begin once a student begins the exam and do not pause if the student navigates away from the quiz. If no time limit is set, students will have unlimited time to complete the quiz.
Quiz Responses [4]: You can choose to allow students to view their answers, any automatic feedback generated by the quiz for correct or incorrect answers, and which questions they got wrong. Quizzes default to this option, so if you do not want students to see their quiz responses, deselect the checkbox.
Correct Answers [6]: You can allow students to see correct quiz answers after completing the quiz. This setting enables a green Correct tab on every correct answer for the entire quiz. Quizzes default to this option, so if you do not want students to see the correct answers, deselect the checkbox.
Once you have set up the settings for your quiz, click the Questions tab to create the quiz questions and points. You can create individual quiz questions, questions with a question bank, questions with a question group, and questions with a question bank in a question group.
Note: You should not publish your quiz until it is your final product. If you are ready to publish your quiz and make it available to students, click the Save & Publish button.
Before publishing the quiz, if you want to see the student view and make sure it appears correctly, click the Preview button [2]. To edit the quiz, click the Edit button [3].
To unlock a quiz indefinitely, click the No time limit radio button [1]. If you prefer to unlock a quiz until a specific date and time, click the Until radio button [2] and use the calendar icon [3] to select the date and time. Click the Unlock button [4] when you are done.
Scenario: one student misses a quiz. The availability window has passed. You want to open the quiz for that one student, and give them exactly one more day in which to open and take their quiz. This comes up ALL THE TIME.
1. Go to "moderate the quiz", act like you want to give the student an extra attempt (no I don't, they get one attempt once they open the quiz, so already this is counter-intuitive, and now by their name it says they get two attempts (?) when they haven't even taken the quiz yet), and click "manually unlock the quiz for the next attempt", but checking that box doesn't accomplish manually unlocking the quiz, and there is no clarification on how to do that.
And to figure this out you have to read through like five pages of tutorials, none of which tell you the whole answer, and each of which give you several scenarios that are of no relevance to this question, so you are wading through words and not even knowing if you are getting the correct information.
How many students do you have in your course? I'm not sure if this would be a workable solution for you...but instead of using the "Moderate Quiz" feature of the quiz, have you considered using the "Assign to" option instead? I am guessing that when you edit your quiz, your "Assign to" field probably says "Everyone". But, if you didn't have a large number of students, you could click on the "+ Add" button and then add that specific student with access dates just for him/her, and then everyone else would have the normal access dates that you had originally set up.
In these Guides, Once I publish a quiz, how can I give my students ... - Instructure Community - 1242 (canvaslms.com) and Once I publish a timed quiz, how can I give my stu... - Instructure Community - 999 (canvaslms.com), they have information about how to add extra time to your quiz for a student. But, this also assumes that your quiz was initially set to be timed. However, you can add up to 1440 (24 hours) additional time for a current attempt for a student to take the quiz.
If you were wanting to test any of this out to verify for yourself it any of it might meet your needs, you can sign in to your school's "test" environment. (You normally sign in to your school's "production" Canvas environment.) The "test" environment is an environment separate from "production" in that you can do any testing and "playing around" that you want to test things out...without disturbing anything in your "production" environment. I always encourage people to be sure to sign out of the "test" environment before returning to your "production" environment...just so you don't get confused as to which environment you are working in. Here are a few helpful links for you:
Thank you for this answer. I can see that if I click "Add", I can add a student and give them a specific availability window..so, then do I also need to give them an extra attempt? Because one of the initial tutorials I read indicated that the extra attempt was the way to allow a student to take a quiz after the availability had closed. Or did I just accidentally allow my student to take the quiz twice?
For future reference, the first paragraph of your reply to me is exactly the information that I needed, whereas this guide that you recommend (Once I publish a quiz, how can I give my students ... - Instructure Community - 1242 (canvaslms.com) is totally unhelpful, gives all irrelevant information, and on top of that is also confusing. It was one of the first ones I initially read and I felt totally lost as a result. Just feedback for Canvas on that. I am sure it's great for a very specific situation, but not for the problem I was trying to solve. My quizzes are timed, and I do know how to add extra time. That's not the problem I was trying to solve.
As far as the "testing" environment, I think I have been stuck in that for a few weeks now. Every time I go to my roster, there is a "test student", and when I try to view my quizzes, Canvas has me viewing them as if I am a student, the timer starts, etc. I actually want to be viewing my quizzes as a faculty member, I want to be able to see my correct answers that I've entered, etc. I have never been able to figure out how to do that and it's a little frustrating as well. One of our instructional administrators who is well-versed in Canvas tried to help me figure out how to see my own correct answers in the quizzes that I created, and between us we couldn't figure it out (beyond going to the master shell, which is an extra step and a pain). He deleted "test student" for me, but the next time I logged in, "test student" is back, and apparently Canvas still thinks that I am "test student". Ugh.
As I read through Once I publish a quiz, how can I give my students extra attempts?, it says (in the light blue box), "Moderating the quiz lets you allow extra attempts for individual students as well as multiple students at once. This option also allows you to grant extra attempts for students who have not yet taken the quiz." and also, "When extra attempts are given via the Moderate Quiz option, Canvas keeps the highest quiz score." My interpretation of this is that you are giving "extra" (that seems to me to be the key word here) attempts beyond just the initial attempt.
If you are having difficulty with any of the written Guides here in the Community, the Canvas Community team has a way for you to give them feedback so that they can review and revise anything for better clarification. For example, if you look at the Guide I linked above, scroll down to the very bottom of that page. You'll see a blue "Leave Feedback" button. Click on that button, and you'll see a form appear that you can fill out specific to that Guide. This gets submitted directly to the Documentation Team at Instructure (the folks that make Canvas), and they will review your comments to see if anything could be made clearer in that Guide.
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