The guide describes the route for setting up sessions with Blackboard Collaborate or Teams Meetings. It also makes a comparison of the setup process for each platform to highlight essential constraints and limitations.
Requirements
1. Make joining links for live online sessions available within the Blackboard module.
2. Set up sessions to so that any student on the module can join them.
This provides a consistent access point for students. The reason for this is:
- Links to join online sessions cannot be added in the students’ CMISGo timetable.
- You may not necessarily know, in advance, who needs to attend the live online session.
Links to Blackboard Collaborate sessions:
- Are automatically associated with the Blackboard module.
- Add the Blackboard Collaborate tool link to the module menu to give students access.
- Students should not be sent guest links to join Blackboard Collaborate sessions, where practically possible.
Links to Teams Meetings:
- Need to be copied and pasted into Blackboard and created as weblinks.
What to tell your students
Tell your students:
- Where to find the links to join sessions in their Blackboard module.
- Who the online sessions is intended for.
- Which platform you are using for a session (Blackboard Collaborate or Teams Meeting). You could share links to student facing user guides to help students orientate themselves with the platform prior to the session.
Naming live online sessions
The name should help students identify the relevance of the online session (for example, you could use language that reflects terminology used in the timetable).
- Teams Meetings: It is best practice to include the module code in the name. When meetings are set up in Teams they are added to your Outlook and Teams calendar. This will help you identify the session easily and students will see the title when they join.
- Blackboard Collaborate: Names do not need to include the module code. Students access links to sessions from within the relevant module in Blackboard.
Setting up live online sessions
Please consider the different setup steps, constraints and limitations of each tool, as this may inform your decision about which webinar tool is most appropriate to use.
This information should help you to avoid mistakes and any unnecessary administrative burden when setting up and running your sessions and help to ensure a consistent learning experience for students.
Feature comparison list between Blackboard Collaborate and Teams Meetings.
The following set up instructions are designed to meet the requirement to make joining links available to all students on a module.
Using Blackboard Collaborate
Instructions: Setting up a live online session using Blackboard Collaborate.
Key considerations
- Any academic on the Blackboard module can set up, edit and join a session.
- Recurring sessions have separate joining links.
- Links to join the session are automatically published in the Blackboard module.
- Sessions are automatically available to all students on the module.
- Student automatically join as participants and academics as moderators.
- Captions can be provided in a session but need to be written by someone in real-time.
- Where recording is required and recordings are kept longer than 14 days, a transcript or captions must be provided. To do this, recordings should be uploaded to YuJa and deleted from Blackboard Collaborate.
Using Teams Meeting
Instructions: Setting up a live online session using Teams Meeting.
Key considerations
- The academic running the session needs set up the meeting and is made the Meeting Organiser. (They can invite other academics.)
- Only the Meeting Organiser can edit session details and Meeting Options.
- Only the meeting organiser can download attendance report.
- Edit the Meeting Options to prevent students joining as Presenters.
- Recurring sessions use the same joining link URL.
- Publish the joining link in the Blackboard module.
- Automatic live captions are available during the session.
- Where a recording is required, this should be uploaded to YuJa to meet accessibility requirements.