Forum Discussion
Jeffrey Allen
Mar 05, 2020Silver Contributor
Breakout Rooms for Microsoft Teams
Is Microsoft planning on creating breakout rooms for Teams meetings? If so when? I noticed a post in uservoice and it says it is planned but no timeline and I don't see it on the M365 Roadmap, so c...
- Apr 03, 2020
Jeffrey Allen there is a roundabout way to do with as many breakout rooms / small groups as you want, but it must be set up in advance. I made a video tutorial aimed at teachers, but I've included the steps below too.
- In the Team where you want breakout rooms, create a new Channel for each breakout room.
- Open the Outlook desktop app, click into the Calendar, and then click 'New Teams Meeting' to generate a link to a new video chat.*
- Copy the 'Join Microsoft Teams Meeting' link from the Calendar invite, and paste it into the first channel / breakout room.**
- Repeat this same procedure for each breakout room / channel. It's important to generate new links for each group, or else everyone will end up in the same video chat.
- The teacher / owner of the Team can see all of the private channels and enter any breakout room they want.
Some caveats: this creates the video call as a 'Chat'--the video calls aren't being hosted within the Team itself. So any transcript of the meeting conversation will live inside the 'Chat' (not in the 'Team' itself). Additionally, while it's possible to re-use the same breakout rooms, I think anyone who has ever entered the room at any time (a) will always have access to it from the Chat tab (even if you have removed them from the private Channel), and (b) may get notifications showing the text conversations (even if you have removed them from the private Channel).
*We don't have Exchange Online accounts, but if you do, I believe step 2 can be achieved more easily without exiting Teams by clicking on the 'Meeting' button from the left-side toolbar.
**I find that it works best to paste the link into a new conversation. I tried creating a new Website tab at the top of the Channel and pasting the link, but this added some steps. When I clicked the link from the Website tab, it opened the meeting in my web browser, and then I had to click 'Open in Desktop App' (or something along those lines) before being brought into the video chat. Oddly, the only method that automatically loaded the video chat in the desktop app was pasting the link into a new conversation.
Helen Blunden
Jul 20, 2020Iron Contributor
We SO need this.... Jeffrey Allen
It just opens a lot of possibilities for training, break out meetings, speed networking and so much more. Hoping Microsoft delivers on this because it'll make things a lot easier for meeting facilitators especially where brainstorming, ideating and collaborative work is involved.
- FlorianKurrleAug 02, 2020Brass Contributor
- Helen BlundenAug 02, 2020Iron Contributor
Currently yes, you can do breakout rooms in Teams but I still find it fiddly. Maybe I just need more practice to create the various sub team channels and click on the cameras and move in and out of them seamlessly. Also, it doesn't allocate people randomly to breakout rooms either like Zoom does so I don't find it as easy to use - that is, it requires a bit more forethought and planning to advise people which team they're going into. FlorianKurrle
- FlorianKurrleAug 03, 2020Brass Contributor
I think this is only the workaround since the beginning?
Is there a new function?
Microsoft had planned to create a real breakout function? Did it not planned that?