Hoda
My feedback
11 results found
-
4 votes
Hoda
shared this idea
·
-
46 votes
An error occurred while saving the comment -
2 votes
Hoda
shared this idea
·
-
8 votes
An error occurred while saving the comment
Hoda
commented
I find this would be incredibly more helpful with screen sharing because then both videos become super tiny.
Hoda
supported this idea
·
-
7 votes
Hoda
supported this idea
·
-
9 votes
Hoda
supported this idea
·
-
10 votes
An error occurred while saving the comment
Hoda
commented
I would like to add that perhaps each person seeing the other's video as bigger than their own would be extremely helpful in language teaching for one-on-one classes.
Hoda
supported this idea
·
-
15 votes
This feature is planned.
An error occurred while saving the comment
Hoda
commented
Can the meeting host have the option of toggling this off for users? I do one-on-one classes where this feature is not only unnecessary for young students but also distracting.
-
22 votes
An error occurred while saving the comment
Hoda
commented
Can the meeting host have the option of not allowing users to turn on captions? I teach a second language to kids, and when we used to use Google Meet, they'd sometimes turn them on and read inaccurate transcriptions that become distracting instead of helpful. I do one-on-one classes where it's easy to determine the needs of my student.
-
30 votes
Hoda
supported this idea
·
-
48 votes
This feature is planned.
An error occurred while saving the comment
Hoda
commented
Can the meeting host have the option of not allowing users to have custom backgrounds? I teach kids online, and when we used to use Google Meet and Zoom, they'd keep playing around with different backgrounds. It can be distracting to young participants in a class room setting. I do one-on-one classes where it's easy to determine the needs of my student.
Can this feature be present but allow the meeting host to have the option of not allowing users to turn on captions? I teach a second language to kids, and when we used to use Google Meet, they'd sometimes turn them on and read inaccurate transcriptions that become distracting instead of helpful. I do one-on-one classes where it's easy to determine the needs of my student.