 In a previous video, I made a page and typed in the content myself. This is great for short pages, but what if you already have a document in a word processor and want to make it a page in Canvas? Here's the course outline for the course that we're building. It's four pages long. We don't want to retype all of this by hand. How do we get it into Canvas? First, in Canvas, we'll return to the home page and create a new page titled course outline, select it, and edit it. Now, go back to the word processor, select all, and copy. In the rich content editor, we right-click and paste. Remember that the content area in Canvas isn't a full word processor. It's designed for making things that look good on a web page. That means you may have to edit things. For example, this section here, which looks great in the word processor, doesn't look so great in Canvas. I'm going to edit the content by changing those sections to bulleted lists. And by the way, I'm speeding up the video here. Now, I'll get rid of this extra line here and move this heading into its proper place. I'll get rid of these extra blank lines, and these here as well. To complete the job, I'd want to get rid of the extra lines here in the course schedule, but you get the idea. When you're done editing, remember to save or save and publish. You don't want to lose all your hard work. There is a way to upload the original file to Canvas as well to make it available to students, and we'll cover that in another video. There's one additional thing that I do want to point out now. The page we added is the last thing in the module. We'd rather have it as the first one. If you need to move things around within a module, use this icon with the eight dots. It lets you drag things to the location that you want. That's how you take material from an existing document and put it into the content area in Canvas.