Students can create their own Zoom meetings. Here are some instructions for creating and managing a meeting.
Create a Zoom Meeting
- Access your UT Zoom account at utexas.zoom.us
- Click on the "New Meeting" button to create a new meeting
- Click on the "Invite" button to invite others to your meeting and share your Meeting ID with them
Managing Zoom Meetings
Zoom has extensive controls for managing meetings. Here are some abbreviated instructions to give you an idea of what is available. For further instructions you may access helpful short videos and directions under Video Tutorials in your utexas.zoom.us account
The Participant Window
- Access this via the link in the Zoom toolbar at the bottom of your live Zoom session.
- This window will list the names of attendees and allows students to raise their hands and react without having their camera on using non-verbal icons
- Remember that students with raised hands are moved to the top of the window
- TIP: This is where the host can access the handy "Mute All" function in case people's mics are on and causing distractions
The Chat Window
- Access this via the link in the Zoom toolbar at the bottom of your live Zoom session.
- In this window, students can ask and answer each other’s questions in a chat thread
- Chat can be saved
The Whiteboard
- The whiteboard is under Share (right after the desktop)
- You need the whiteboard controller open to use the whiteboard
- Participants in the meeting can annotate the whiteboard and the whiteboard can be saved
Basics of Screen-Sharing
- Make sure that you have your PowerPoint deck open and ready to go
- When you are ready to display your slides, share your screen by clicking the Share Screen button at the bottom of your Zoom window, and then select your PowerPoint deck from the available options to share
This video walks you through the steps
- Click the Slide Show tab at the top of the PowerPoint window that opened when you selected your PowerPoint deck, and then click the Set Up Slide Show icon
- In the Set Up Show window under "Show type," select "Browsed by an individual (window)" then click OK
- After these setup procedures you may Play your presentation and begin your lecture
- Once you are finished you can stop your screen share by clicking the red Stop Share button at the top of your Zoom window
Optimizing Applications You're Sharing
Screen-sharing Excel Files
- The quality of your meeting experience will depend on the participant’s Internet speeds and bandwidth, which may be variable and unreliable.
- To ensure a good experience, the fewer changes that you have in your video feed the better for the online participants.
- If there are a lot of data calculations in an Excel file (Solver and Regression), there may be a delay when sharing and visibility can be fuzzy for your participants.
- Simple Excel computations (case analyses) will work fine
Screen-sharing PowerPoint
- If you have concerns about your bandwidth, save your PowerPoint slides to a PDF file.
- Keep in mind that the PPT slides in Presentation Mode will take up your entire screen and may cause issues seeing other files and the Zoom controls, chat window, etc. The slides in PDF format will result in a good instructor/student experience.
- See link below for ways to share a ppt deck: https://support.zoom.us/hc/en-us/articles/203395347-Screen-Sharing-a-PowerPoint-Presentation
- We highly recommend that you have a PDF document of the PowerPoint deck as a back-up to be shared easily at low bandwidths.
Screen-sharing Video
- To share a video in your Zoom class, please view: https://support.zoom.us/hc/en-us/articles/202954249-Optimizing-a-Shared-Video-Clip-in-Full-Screen
- Tip: If you can stream your video from YouTube it is advisable do that. The speed will be higher because the video is downloading directly from YouTube’s servers, rather than uploading from your computer and then downloading on your participant’s computers.
Group presentations
- When two or more students are at one computer presenting as a group in a Zoom meeting, multiple students can be on the mic (6-7 are usually fine) and one can share the presentation screen with the class. The others can talk and the presenter can advance the slides
- Have the host make presenters co-hosts during their presentation so that they may control the participant window and can handle raised hands and unmute other students to take questions
Still need help?
Go to the Student Troubleshooting page first. If that doesn't help:
For McCombs students, please contact Media Services via email or phone:
- Email VC-Trouble@mccombs.utexas.edu
- Call 512-232-6679 (GSB/CBA) and 512-232-4646 (RRH)
For all other UT students, please contact your respective college or school