This article was last updated Jun 5, 2025 @ 10:34 am.
Sharing course materials through Canvas can be a meaningful way to foster collaboration, ensure continuity, and support both colleagues and students. Whether you’re preparing to co-teach a course or helping a colleague transition into a new teaching assignment, it’s important to share responsibly and effectively. This guide outlines what to consider when sharing materials in Canvas, how to prepare your content, and the best methods for sharing with others.
Before sharing course materials, it is important to review the course and make sure the materials are ready for others to use. This helps preserve your original course’s structure and allows you to customize your materials without affecting past versions of the course.
As you prepare your course for sharing, keep the following in mind:
Only include materials relevant to the course. Remove any personal notes, drafts of content, or term/student-specific information that may be inappropriate to share or unhelpful to another teacher. If you’re using links to Google Docs, double-check that sharing settings are open to “Anyone with the link” so that access isn’t restricted.
Keep confidential information private. If your course includes recorded lectures where students can be seen or heard, such videos should be edited to remove or mask students’ participation before being shared. Student course data, such as enrollment, grades, discussion posts, or assignment submissions, as well as Zoom recordings automatically uploaded through the Canvas integration, will not be included in a course copy. Review the PSU Registrar’s page FERPA and Student Records Privacy FAQs for more information about FERPA and confidential student information.
Do you have permission to share? OAI and all university employees are governed by the university Copyright Ownership Policy. PSU faculty members generally retain ownership of their instructional materials, and you can share your course materials with colleagues directly. Accordingly, the Office of Academic Innovation needs written permission from the course content owner in order to share course content with another instructor unless the situation meets the exception criteria in the policy that covers an unforeseen event that circumstances require that another person teach the course on short notice. OAI will consult with the Department Chair in these cases.
How to share your materials
When you’re sharing course materials with a colleague or other instructor, we recommend against adding a colleague to the live or completed Canvas shell with student data. Instead, choose one of the following sharing methods depending on your needs.
Create a copy of the course to share
Share level
Entire course
Best For
Sharing an entire course with a PSU colleague
You can create a “sandbox” copy of the course to share with one or more colleagues. This will enable your colleague(s) to interact with your course without affecting the “live” Canvas shell or seeing confidential student course information.
In order for the person you add to be able to copy elements of your course, you will need to assign them the role of Teacher, Guest Teacher, or Designer. Keep in mind that all of these roles will give them editing access and the ability to change contentin the sandbox.
Create a course export file
Share level
Entire course
Best For
Sharing with colleagues outside of PSU; archiving course content for your own needs
You can also export your course as a package file and share it via Google Drive. This is also a great way to archive content for your own purposes.
Sharing course materials broadly with the PSU campus or all Canvas users
You can also share your entire course or just parts of it through Canvas Commons. This tool allows you to make your content available either to everyone at PSU or to the broader Canvas community. If you prefer a more controlled environment, you can reach out to the Office of Academic Innovation (OAI) to help you set up a private departmental or team space within Commons to limit access.
Sharing discrete course components with specific individuals
If you only want to share selected items—like a quiz, module, or assignment—you can use the “Send To…” feature in Canvas. This allows you to send individual course components directly to another instructor without sharing the entire course.