Using Microsoft Teams for teaching
This collection is designed to support you to set up and use Microsoft Teams in your teaching.
LX / Find resources
This collection is designed to support you to set up and use Microsoft Teams in your teaching.
You can request a site to be created in Canvas or Teams as your non-subject site. The purpose of the site should determine whether this site is created in Canvas or Teams. For example, if you want to maintain a centralised source of static information for students in a course of study,...
Open Microsoft Teams and navigate to your all teams page. Select the gear icon and ‘Manage teams’. Click on the three dots to the right of the team you want to archive. Select ‘Archive team’ from the menu. Select ‘Archive’. The archived team will now appear in an ‘Archived’...
You can use the first dropdown to select whether you would like the post to exist as a new conversation or an ‘Announcement’ with set formatting and a selectable background colour/image. The second dropdown allows you to limit who can reply – either leaving it open for anyone or...
Quick collaborative document You or your students can create a quick collaborative document, either as part of a group exercise or as part of a contact exercise that you are running with them. Meeting notes An easy way for people to collect together notes when having a meeting that...
Following this process will assist you to: Create a MS Teams site from within Canvas Students will be automatically added and updated according to enrolment status Canvas and Teams sites will be consistently named Students can access Teams directly from Canvas LX.lab assistance is only required if you need...
How to do this Backchannelling can be used in classrooms to enable engaging and interactive learning environments. To encourage all students to participate actively, i.e. post a comment, question, concern or the facts/ideas they consider important, backchannelling can be made compulsory component of your class activities. Here’s how you...
There are a number of different ways to structure Microsoft Teams for different types of student experiences. The first thing to determine is the model that will work best for your teaching. Below are some suggested models based on the most common user cases. You can request that one...
To set up a class, team or group within Teams, you will need to: Navigate to the left-hand side of the app and click the ‘Teams’ icon On the bottom left of the screen, click ‘Join or create a team’ This will take you to a page of tiles....