This section of the site hosts the term projects.  Each report author should claim a project page under the Project menu by navigating to one, edit the Project # field at the top of the page to rename it as yours, and then continue to develop their work on their selected page. Include your first and/or last name in your title. Be sure to follow the Guidelines for this project on Canvas.

Read this page closely for details and suggestions for building your page.

Navigate to your project page using the site menu before you start your project; do not post project material on this page. Choose Edit Page at the very top of the site or the to claim, name, and work on your page.

.Your project can contain any number and combination of short video clips (.mp4), screen recordings (.mp4), screen grabs, data visualizations and maps (live and static).

.Remember that photo sizes can be enlarged or reduced in the editor so that details are visible. Grab the frame of the image to resize it.

.Remember the workflow for embedding iframe codes for live data visualizations. Before you can insert an embed code, you  must switch to the Text tab on the top right of the editing interface and then paste the iframe code into the page. If you are using FLOURISH, be sure to select the iframe code under options as you are publishing.

.Often the size of the embed does not appear correct when you first add it, so you may want to Preview the page to confirm the live connection before going further. Once you’ve done that, you can switch back to editing under the Visual tab; your full live visualization should also appear in the page body once you return to it from the editing page.

.If you are uploading video clips or screen recordings, use an export format for YouTube or .MP4. Can embed from a YouTube hosted video.
.You may revise the title of your project page, at the top, but do keep your name(s) in the title in some form. E.g.  A Great Project (by name).

.Citations from authors and discussions can be written in-text with a list of references at the end.

.As you build your project, you may save your work as drafts before publishing or do your work privately. Change the “Status” or “Visibility” settings, respectively, near the top right of the browser window. Only you will see the content on your page. When you are ready to share your project, remember to return these settings to Published and Public.

.Name your project page with the Title and your name(s)

.I am available to answer questions and troubleshoot.

.I encourage you to include reflections on the project on your same project page:  What you sought to do with your project, what it achieved, and limitations you faced. Of course, cite and discuss any connections to our readings and discussions that informed your work.

FINALLY:
You may invite feedback, notes and questions on your project page. Be sure that you tick  “Allow comments” on your own project page (near bottom the editing page) to enable commenting.

Leave your comments at the bottom of individual project pages in the box.