This article provides examples of how Hypothesis can be used in online learning. Hypothesis is not support by the Boise State Help Desk, refer to the provider for technical details.

Overview

Hypothesis is a great way for you and your students to bring web pages, PDFs, or ebooks alive with:

This keeps discussions and your instructor guidance grounded in the material and helps students refer directly to the text instead of talking generally about it.

What it looks like

An article on the left show multiple areas with highlighted text.   A section of the page has a pop-up menu with options to either annotate or highlight. On the right, a sidebar shows user comments connected to to the highlighted text.

Figure 1: Screenshot from browser-based hypothesis integration (non-Boise-State course)

Perfect Fits

Here are some situations where Hypothesis could be a perfect fit:

References:

How to integrate Hypothesis into Canvas

Successful use cases (w/ examples)

THEA 230: Development of Theater 1:

(Created by Teresa Focarile with assistance from Monica Brown and Ben Croft)

Teresa knew there were two things she wanted to change about her course: ease the financial burden on the students and getting her students to cite evidence from the readings.

Other enhancements