 Hi, folks. In this short tutorial, I'm going to show you how to submit a video file to Canvas Studio and turn in an assignment as a student. Let's go ahead and get to it. So I have a basic assignment guide up for an informative speech, and this is an assignment or as a student. You would be asked to record an informative speech and then upload it into Canvas. I've already got this set up to accept studio files, so I'm going to get started by clicking the Start Assignment button. And then down here you're going to see that under Submission, there are a bunch of different options here, but what I'm looking for today is the Studio tab. When you click on the Studio tab, it's going to bring up the Studio interface here, and there's a bunch of different options. Now, if you view Studio for other things, you might see a library here with a bunch of different stuff. I'm going to assume, if you're watching this video, you haven't uploaded anything yet. And so in that case, we're going to want to go ahead and click this Add button. I will note that it is possible to record directly from Studio and do some other things, but I'm going to assume that for the sake of this tutorial, you have recorded your speech video, and you are ready to go ahead and upload that in. So I'm going to click that Add button, and then I'm going to select the option over here. It says Drag and Drop or Upload Media, and I'm going to click Browse Files. At this point, you need to find the video file that you want to submit. I have conveniently placed mine on my desktop, a student underscore informative speech, and I'm going to go ahead and click Open to bring that in. And now it's just going to take a couple of minutes for it to upload the video file. I will note that if you have recorded your video in extra high resolution, it may take a while for it to complete this process. And so especially on newer devices like newer iPhones that record an HD or 4K by default, it may take quite a while to complete this if you don't have a super fast video connection. All right, let's go ahead and give that a second, and we'll check in. Great, now you can see on my kind of average internet, that whole process took about four minutes. If you have faster internet than I do, because I have about an average connection, it might go a little bit quicker. But if you have slow internet, it may go a little bit slower, and so it may be in your best interest to record in a slightly lower resolution if it does give you problems. Now that the video has been added to my studio library, I'm ready to go ahead and click Select by hovering over that video, and then go ahead and embed it. I like to give the option to download just in case there are any issues, but that is obviously a choice that is up to you. And I do think it's helpful that if your instructor has included a rubric as you turn the video in, you get that one last look at that rubric to ensure what you got going on here is what you want. So I'm going to go ahead and click Embed, and then at that point I'm going to certify that this is my own original work, and submit my assignment. Now if you scroll up, you can see that it shows that it was submitted, and you can see the details of the submission, and this will let you to even go back and watch it to make sure that everything is working correctly. And if not, you can always resubmit that assignment. All right, folks, well that wraps up the process of using Canvas Studio to submit a video to an assignment on Canvas. Thanks for watching, and good luck.