It was interesting to hear that ID's possibly are not as ubiquitous as I had come to believe. And it's also good to hear that K-12 is becoming a much larger user base for Canvas. I do agree with you that good instructional design is good instructional design, whether it's for a second grader or a second year college student. However, there are still some really tough sticking points for me that still lead me in the direction of separate LMS's.
One point is the overall look and feel of crucial parts of the Canvas environment. Just two items in particular are the Modules and the Calendar. They are crowded, small-fonted, and not set up for young eyes, young eye-hand coordination, and young minds. Modules' mini-sized mono-color environment is very tough for kids younger than 3rd or 4th grade to navigate. Yes, teachers could use Pages to create the large-buttoned, colorful environment that kids are accustomed to using with their other educational software ... but then they'd be losing all of the wonderful functionality that Modules provide. And again, as I mentioned in the previous post, teachers would have to know some HTML magic to even make those lovely Pages.
Then there are the "silly" little things - like a default font size of 11 (which is, I know, better than it used to be!) that can't be changed by the teacher...why not? That should be part of the course settings. Any K-6 teacher would tell you that it's a huge annoyance to have to constantly adjust the font to a larger size. This is only one example of pain points that are not being addressed for K-12 users.
With the limited time they have for developing course materials during their 60+ hour work weeks, K-12 teachers desperately need Canvas to have a robust plug-and-play environment for course material creation. I see Canvas evolving in good ways toward that end, but I fear it's not happening fast enough because there is still the mindset of "you can do that - just click here, and here, and here" or worse, it takes going into CSS/HTML. Nope, not gonna happen. I and my co-coaches can stumble through some HTML but none of us have even touched CSS. There's not a single person in my school district who is competent at CSS or HTML, and I would venture to guess that this is true of most K-12 systems of moderate or small size. The reason? No other software we use requires it.
Another sticking point - as I work with my teachers in creating their courses, I find that I frequently have to say "Just ignore that part/area; it isn't useful to us at k-12." There is a fair amount of HEd "bloat" in Canvas that needs to not be there at the K-12 level - it is confusing and sometimes even a stumbling block to teachers and students alike.
Perhaps if there was a lot more "turn this off/on" functionality at the Admin or Course level in Canvas, maybe we could get around the need for 2 LMS's. A selection of interfaces (like button-type Modules instead of vertical lists) could also be a way around some of the problems.
Now that Canvas' K-12 community is 40% and growing, maybe our peculiar ideas and needs won't be as marginalized as I feel they have been in the past. Frankly, I've been really put off by some of the patronizing and downright negative attitudes that I've experienced from HEd people in the Community Ideas forum. Unfortunately, there's generally precious little feedback and voting coming in from K-12 because, again, teachers' time is so overbooked and focused on student needs that the Canvas Community takes a distant back seat to other priorities. But over time, I guess the sheer numbers of K-12 users will eventually compensate for that problem. So maybe a single-LMS future could be brighter than I have been envisioning!
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