Future Course Template — Design System

Component Library

  • Version 2
  • Sections 10
  • Status Active — In Development

Reusable building blocks that can be combined to create complete course experiences. Components are organized by category. Journey Green = interactive. Dark Blue = informational.

Foundation

Design standards — typography, color, icons, and global structural elements.

Typography

H1 uses Merriweather 900 (hero only). H2—H4 and all body copy use Roboto. Line lengths are capped at 72ch for readability.

Type scale
H1 · Merriweather 900

Course Title Here

H2 · Roboto 700 · Blue

Section Heading

H3 · Roboto 700 · Navy

Subsection Heading

H4 · Roboto 700 · Navy

Component Label

Body · Roboto 400 · 1rem

The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog. Line length is capped at 72 characters for comfortable reading.

Caption · 0.875rem · Muted

Figure 1. Caption text appears below images and media blocks in a smaller, muted style.

Colors

UMA brand palette. Journey Green is reserved for interactive elements. Dark Blue is used for informational content and headings.

Color swatches
Journey Green #15eac4 Interactive / CTAs
Legend Blue #0d3553 Headings / Dark UI
Hero Blue #1d6ba6 H2 / Links / Active
Horizon Blue #0095c8 Tips / Secondary
Success #2f7d59 Correct / Complete
Warning #f2b84b Important / Caution
Error #c93f38 Danger / Incorrect
Surface Bg #f7f9fb Page background

Icons

Lucide SVG icon set for activity types, media types, and status indicators. Use the .icon-svg class for consistent 22px stroke-based rendering.

Icon set

Learning Path Activities

Learn
Practice
Do
Apply AI
Apply PULSE

Learning Materials

Video
Reading
Assignment
Discussion
Test
Interactive
Audio

Link & Resource Actions

Download
External Link

Information & Support Callouts

Warning
Reminder
Tip
Info
Bookmark

Assessment Icons

Check Square
X Circle
Toggle
Multiple Choice
True or False
Dropdown
Multiple Answers
Click & Reveal
Short Answer

Miscellaneous Icons

User
Users
Search
Layers
Link
Shield
Zap

Hero Banner

Full-width page header. Uses gradient background, H1 in Merriweather, and optional meta tags. One per page.

Live preview

SS1000 — Week 1, Module 1

Transitioning to Professional Learning

  • Time 45 min
  • Type Key Points
  • Graded No

Information Components

Static callouts, alerts, and emphasis blocks. Dark Blue = informational. No hover or interactive states.

Key Takeaway

Navy-bordered callout for the single most important concept in a section. Use sparingly — one per module section.

Live preview

Quote Block

Sage green left-bordered emphasis block with a decorative quote mark and italic text. For impactful quotes or course maxims. Not a standard blockquote.

Live preview

"Professional learners do not just hope to succeed. They build behaviors, systems, and standards that make success more likely."

Callout — Four Types

Four semantic callout variants: Note (green), Tip (Journey Green), Important (gold), Danger (red). Each has a unique icon and color treatment. Note and Tip are informational; Important and Danger require action.

Live previews — all four types

Alert Bar

Full-width notification banner. Use for announcements. Default is orange/amber. The urgent variant (gold) is for deadline warnings and policy alerts.

Live previews
Week 2 is now open.

All learning materials for Week 2 are available. Your first submission is due Sunday at 11:59 PM EST.

Scenario / Context Block

Horizon-bordered block for case studies, scenarios, and real-world context. Use before presenting a problem or discussion prompt.

Live preview
Scenario

A radiologic technologist notices that a patient has multiple imaging orders for the same anatomical region within a 30-day period. The referring physician has not provided updated clinical justification.

What steps should the technologist take before proceeding with the examination?

Clinical Connection

Scenario block variant labeled "Clinical Connection" — bridges academic content to real-world clinical practice.

Live preview
Clinical Connection

Rapidly dividing cells such as bone marrow, intestinal epithelium, and reproductive cells are more radiosensitive than slowly dividing cells. This principle directly informs radiation therapy dose planning and the occupational exposure limits for health professionals.

Real World Example

Scenario block variant for applied industry examples — connects theory to observable professional behavior.

Live preview
Real World Example

At a busy outpatient imaging center, a technologist who applies ALARA principles reviews each order before positioning — adjusting field size and technique factors to minimize dose while maintaining diagnostic image quality. This habit protects both the patient and the technologist over a career spanning thousands of exposures.

FAQ Block

Accordion-based frequently asked questions. Use to reduce page length while keeping reference content accessible.

Live preview — interactive accordion


Activity Components

Labels, badges, and metadata elements that identify activity type, grading status, timing, and deadlines.

Activity Type Labels

Four labels — Learn, Practice, Do, Apply AI — that classify every course activity. Practice uses teal to distinguish it from the gold Important callout. Used consistently across all page types.

Live preview — all four types
Learn Practice Do Apply AI
Graded Not Graded

Due Date Callout

Gold-bordered inline badge showing the deadline for an activity or week. Always place near the relevant action.

Live preview
Due Sunday, 11:59 PM EST

Estimated Time

Small muted pill showing approximate completion time. Always show next to activity titles on Learn dashboards.

Live preview — typical usage
~20 min ~45 min ~1.5 hrs

Point Value Badge

Navy pill showing the point value of a graded activity. Used on Do pages and Weekly Activities sections.

Live preview
25 pts 50 pts 100 pts

Submission Help Block

Step-by-step submission instructions placed below graded activity descriptions. Reduces support requests.

Live preview
How to Submit
  1. Open the Assignment in D2L Assignments.
  2. Click Add a File and select your completed PDF.
  3. Click Submit and confirm your submission.
  4. Save the confirmation email as proof of submission.

Having trouble? Contact Technical Support or message your instructor through D2L.


Static Content

Image layouts, feature blocks, and decorative containers for presenting rich media and introductory content.

Media Block (Image / Video)

16:9 intrinsic-ratio container for video embeds and images. Required metadata: type badge, duration, caption, transcript link.

Live preview
Video 14 min
Video Player Placeholder Replace with D2L video embed or hosted iframe. Include title attribute.

Welcome to Week 2: Cellular Biology. This video introduces cell structure and how radiation interacts with cellular components.

View full transcript

Figure with Caption

Image container with a clearly associated caption. Replace the placeholder with an actual image and add descriptive alt text.

Live preview
Figure 1. Diagram of a generalized eukaryotic cell showing major organelles. Adapted from course textbook, Chapter 5.

Video Placeholder (Kaltura)

Standardized 16:9 placeholder for Kaltura-hosted video content. Use this while the actual video is pending; replace with the Kaltura embed when available.

Live preview
Kaltura Video

Introduction to Cell Biology

Replace with Kaltura embed. Include a descriptive title attribute on the iframe.

Image Placeholder

Standardized placeholder for images that are pending final assets. Replace with an <img> tag with descriptive alt text when the asset is ready.

Live preview

Image Pending

Replace with <img> tag. Add meaningful alt text describing the content.

Jumbotron

Large feature block with gradient background for module introductions, welcome messages, or key announcements.

Live preview

Welcome to Radiation Biology

In this course you will explore how ionizing radiation interacts with living tissue — from the molecular level to the whole organism. Your knowledge of these principles will directly inform how you practice as a radiologic technologist.

Section Banner

Navy banner for introducing major page sections or module transitions. Lighter than the hero banner.

Live preview

Module 2: Academic Identity and Self-Awareness

5 activities · ~72 min · All ungraded study resources


Layout Components

Grid and column structures for organizing content. Use the simplest layout that communicates the relationship between items.

Two Column Layout

Equal-width two-column grid. Collapses to single column below 640px.

Live preview
Column A

Content for the left column. Use for side-by-side text or media comparisons.

Column B

Content for the right column. Keep both columns at a similar reading length.

Three Column Layout

Three equal-width columns. Best used for lists of three related items or step overviews.

Live preview
Step 1

Complete all Learn activities in the module.

Step 2

Take the ungraded Practice self-check.

Step 3

Submit graded Do activities by Sunday.

Comparison Panel

Two-column dark panel for contrasting opposing concepts. Navy left, Hero Blue right.

Live preview

Passive Learner

  • Reads content without engaging
  • Waits until Sunday to begin
  • Relies on last-minute review

Professional Learner

  • Takes notes and connects concepts
  • Distributes study time across the week
  • Seeks clarification early

Icon Checklist

Blue-circle check marks for learning objectives and structured lists. More visually engaging than plain bullet lists.

Live preview
  • Identify the major organelles of a eukaryotic cell and describe their functions.
  • Explain the structure and function of the cell membrane.
  • Describe how ionizing radiation affects DNA at the molecular level.

Timeline

Vertical timeline for historical events, sequences, and content chronology. Each item uses a neutral hollow dot, an optional .timeline-date label, a heading, and a description.

Live preview
1895

Discovery of X-Rays

Wilhelm Röntgen discovers X-rays while experimenting with cathode ray tubes, earning the first Nobel Prize in Physics in 1901.

1898

Discovery of Radium

Marie and Pierre Curie isolate radium and polonium, demonstrating that radioactivity is an atomic property — not a surface phenomenon.

1946

ICRP Radiation Protection Standards

The International Commission on Radiological Protection publishes the first formal guidance on permissible dose limits for occupationally exposed workers.

Process Flow / Numbered Steps

Left-bordered numbered step items for multi-step instructions, processes, or procedures.

Live preview
1

Analyze the Order

Review the imaging request for clinical indication, patient history, and prior exams.

2

Verify Patient Identity

Confirm two patient identifiers before positioning — name and date of birth.

3

Apply ALARA Principles

Select the minimum exposure factors required to produce a diagnostic image.

Data Table — 2 Column

Two-column accessible table with navy header row and row headers. Use for term/definition or criterion/description pairs.

Live preview
PULSE Competencies
CompetencyWhat It Looks Like as a Student
CommunicationAsking questions early, reading directions carefully, seeking clarification before deadlines.
ProfessionalismMeeting expectations, following through, completing work to standard consistently.
Time ManagementPlanning study time across the week and managing competing responsibilities.

Dynamic Components

Interactive components. Journey Green signals interactivity — borders, icons, and hover states use Journey Green throughout.

Links — Internal, External & Modal

Standard link styling. External links show ↗ indicator with tooltip. Download links show ↓ prefix with tooltip. Media links show an eye indicator and open a placeholder overlay on click — used for videos and images.

Resource List Links

Left-bordered clickable links with hover arrow for reading lists and resource sections.

Accordion — Single

Single expandable section. Journey Green left border signals interactivity. Click to expand; one open at a time.

Live preview — click to expand

Accordion — Group (Multi)

Multiple accordion items in one container. Use data-accordion-multi to allow all panels to be open simultaneously.

Live preview — multi-open accordion group

Tabs — Horizontal (3 tabs)

Tabbed content panel. Journey Green active tab with dark navy text. Supports 2—6 tabs. Use arrow keys to navigate between tabs.

Live preview — keyboard navigable

Module 1: Transitioning to Professional Learning — Academic identity, PULSE competencies, and the habits of effective college students. Approximately 65 minutes.

Tabs — Vertical (3 tabs)

Side-by-side tab layout. Useful when tab labels are long or content panels need more horizontal space.

Live preview

The eukaryotic cell contains a nucleus, mitochondria, ribosomes, and the endoplasmic reticulum. The nucleus houses DNA and is the primary target for radiation-induced cellular damage.

Click and Reveal

Native HTML <details> element. Journey Green accent signals interactivity. No JavaScript required — progressively enhanced.

Live preview — click to reveal
What does ALARA stand for?

As Low As Reasonably Achievable. ALARA is the guiding principle of radiation protection that directs practitioners to minimize patient and occupational dose while maintaining diagnostic image quality. It is required by the NRC and forms the ethical foundation of radiologic technology practice.

What is the critical target for radiation injury in a cell?

The nucleus — specifically, the DNA within it. Double-strand DNA breaks (DSBs) are the most critical lesion because they are the least likely to be repaired correctly, potentially leading to mutation or cell death.

Flip Cards

Click or tap to reveal. Front shows the term; back shows the definition. Avoid for critical content — supplement only.

Live preview — click or tap to flip

ALARA

Radiation protection principle

Click or tap to reveal

As Low As Reasonably Achievable — minimize dose while maintaining diagnostic quality.

Radiolysis

Indirect radiation effect

Click or tap to reveal

The ionization of water molecules by radiation, producing hydroxyl free radicals (•OH) that damage DNA.

Bergonié & Tribondeau

Radiosensitivity law

Click or tap to reveal

Cells are most radiosensitive when rapidly dividing, undifferentiated, and with a long mitotic future.

Hotspots

Image with positioned numbered markers and a legend below. Current implementation is static. Interactive click-to-reveal functionality is planned for future development.

Static display — replace placeholder with image
Planned for Future Development Interactive click-to-reveal hotspots will allow learners to click markers and view pop-up definitions. Current view shows the static labeled state.
[ Cell Diagram — Replace with actual image ]
  1. Nucleus — Primary radiation target; contains DNA. Double-strand breaks are the most critical lesion.
  2. Mitochondria — Energy center; radiation disrupts function and increases reactive oxygen species.
  3. Cell Membrane — Phospholipid bilayer; radiation can increase permeability via lipid peroxidation.

Assessment Components

Self-check and formative assessment elements. All are ungraded unless deployed through a D2L Quiz tool. Immediate feedback where applicable.

Multiple Choice

Single-correct-answer question with immediate feedback. Journey Green icon signals interactivity. Resets with "Try again" button.

Live preview — click an answer

Knowledge Check

Which organelle is considered the primary critical target for radiation-induced cellular damage?

True / False

Two-option multiple choice for true/false statements. Uses the same knowledge-check pattern with two answer choices.

Live preview — click an answer

True or False?

The indirect effect of ionizing radiation accounts for approximately two-thirds of all radiation-induced DNA damage.

Dropdown Selection

Native select element for fill-in-the-blank or classification questions. Accessible without JavaScript.

Live preview — select an answer then click Check

Short Answer

Open-ended text area for reflection questions. Not graded in this implementation — responses are local only.

Live preview

Reflection Question

In your own words, explain why the nucleus is considered the most critical target for radiation-induced cellular damage.

Matching Activity

Term—definition pairs with Journey Green connectors. Current implementation is a static visual display. Interactive drag-and-drop matching is planned for future development.

Static display — term to definition
Planned for Future Development Interactive drag-and-drop matching will replace this static display. Current view shows the matched state for reference.
Nucleus
Primary radiation target; houses DNA
Radiolysis
Ionization of water by radiation
ALARA
As Low As Reasonably Achievable

Check All That Apply

Multiple-correct-answer question. Validates selections on submit, highlights missed correct answers in yellow, and provides a “Try again” reset button.

Live preview — select answers then check

Check All That Apply

Which of the following are examples of highly radiosensitive cells?

Select all that apply, then click Check Answers.

Select all correct answers

Sorting Activity

Drag-and-drop categorization activity. Current implementation is a static visual display showing the sorted state. Interactive drag-and-drop is planned for future development.

Static display — shows sorted state
Planned for Future Development Interactive drag-and-drop sorting will allow learners to drag items into the correct categories. Current view shows the completed sorted state for reference.

Sort these cell types by radiation sensitivity.

High Sensitivity

Bone marrow cells
Intestinal epithelium
Reproductive cells

Low Sensitivity

Nerve cells
Muscle cells

Drag-and-drop interaction planned for Phase 5.



Resource Components

Cards for presenting learning resources. Journey Green left border on all interactive resource cards.

Resource Cards — All Types

Modular resource cards for video, reading, download, external, and tool links. Left border color varies by type.

Live preview — five variants
Video 14 min

Video Lesson: Cell Structure & Radiation

Instructor-recorded walkthrough of eukaryotic cell anatomy with focus on the nucleus as the primary radiation target.

Reading 20 min

Chapter 5: Overview of Cell Biology

Required textbook reading. Covers cell theory, organelle structure, and the cell membrane. Focus on Sections 5.1—5.4.

Download PDF

Week 2 Study Guide

Printable summary of Module 1 and Module 2 key concepts, tables, and vocabulary. Helpful for test preparation.

External Reference

NRC — ALARA Principles

Official Nuclear Regulatory Commission guidance on ALARA radiation protection for occupationally exposed workers. Opens in a new tab.

Interactive ~10 min

Clover Lesson: Cell Biology Review

Interactive lesson with labeled diagrams and embedded review questions. Reinforces reading comprehension before Practice.


AI Components

Prototype

Purple-accented components for AI-assisted learning activities. Visual distinction signals the AI-powered nature of these interactions.

AI Practice Activity

Guided AI interaction with a clear task prompt and response area. Students interact with an AI tool and bring results back to the course.

Live preview
AI —AI Practice Activity

Explore Your Career Pathway

Use an AI tool (such as ChatGPT or Claude) to explore career pathways in your program area. Ask the AI to describe three specialization options, the typical daily responsibilities, and the educational requirements for each.

Copy your AI conversation results and paste them into the response area below, then reflect on what surprised you.

AI Reflection Prompt

Open-ended AI-assisted reflection with a guiding prompt. Student generates a response using AI, then adds their own interpretation.

Live preview
AI —AI Reflection Prompt

Reflect on Your Learning Style

Ask an AI tool: "What are the characteristics of a professional learner, and how do they differ from a passive student?" Read the response, then write 2—3 sentences describing how the AI’s response connects to your own academic experience so far.

AI Ethics Callout

Transparent disclosure about AI use expectations in the course. Required wherever AI tools are used in graded activities.

Live preview
AI —AI Use Policy

Using AI in This Activity

This activity encourages you to use AI tools as a starting point — not a final answer. You are expected to read, evaluate, and reflect on what the AI produces. Simply pasting AI output without adding your own thinking will not meet the assignment requirements.

All AI-assisted submissions must be disclosed. See the course syllabus for the full AI use policy.

AI Scenario Exercise

Structured scenario where the student uses AI to analyze a clinical or professional situation, then evaluates the AI output.

Live preview
AI —AI Scenario Exercise

AI-Assisted Case Analysis

Scenario

A patient is scheduled for a chest X-ray and abdominal CT on the same day. The ordering physician has not noted clinical justification linking the two studies.

Ask an AI tool to identify the relevant radiation protection considerations and what a radiologic technologist should do before proceeding.

After reviewing the AI response, write 2—3 sentences evaluating whether the AI’s answer was accurate and complete based on what you have learned in this course.

AI Discussion Prompt

AI-seeded discussion starter where students compare AI-generated answers to their own understanding and peers’ responses.

Live preview
AI —AI Discussion Prompt

Week 1 AI Discussion: Academic Identity

Before posting, ask an AI tool: "What does it mean to have a strong academic identity as an adult learner returning to school?"

In your initial discussion post:

  • Share one thing the AI said that resonated with you.
  • Share one thing the AI missed or got wrong from your own experience.
  • Describe what you believe your academic identity is at the start of this course.

AI Feedback Box

Placeholder container for AI-generated formative feedback. Requires backend integration — shown here as a design pattern only.

Design pattern — requires integration
Planned for Future Development AI Feedback requires backend API integration (Anthropic or OpenAI). This is a design placeholder showing the intended visual layout only.
AI —AI Feedback

Feedback on Your Response

AI-generated feedback will appear here after you submit your response. This component requires backend API integration and is shown as a design placeholder.

Integration Required Connect to Anthropic or OpenAI API. See AI Components documentation for integration guidance.