Microsoft Teams

Microsoft Teams is a collaboration platform that combines persistent chat, file collaboration, instant messaging, and meetings in a single platform. Teams is part of 51情报站's Office 365 and is available to all faculty, staff, and students.

You can access Microsoft Teams through the desktop client on your University-managed computer, using a mobile app ( and ), or on the web at听.


Features

Chat & Meetings

You can start a chat with an individual or a group, turn your chat into a voice or video call, even share your screen and meet. Chat history is retained for one year.

Calls

Make, receive, forward and transfer calls on your university workstation or mobile device. You can make and receive calls using a teams phone number (this requires a Telecom work order to activate).

Team Collaboration

A team is a group of people gathered to get something big done in your organization. Microsoft Teams is a place for teams to work together, share files and organize your work.

Teams are made up of channels, which are the conversations you have with your teammates. Each channel is dedicated to a specific topic, department or project.

Certain team names (like "Human Resources") have been reserved for official use. If you try to create a team and receive a message that "the name can't contain...," submit to request your team.

Course Collaboration

Instructors can use the Course Collaboration Tool to set up class teams for their courses. Class teams are automatically configured and shared with the students registered for that course.


Getting started

  • Go to and log in with your 51情报站 email address and MIDAS password.
  • Click on the Teams app.

From the Course Collaboration Tool

When faculty use 51情报站's Course Collaboration Tool to set up Zoom meetings, Microsoft Teams or shared Google Drives for their courses, students enrolled in those courses can access the collaboration tools from within the portal or from within the course in Blackboard.


Additional Resources

General

Teams and Channels

Meetings