Anonymous wrote:Bandwidth shouldn't be a problem because MCPS is providing internet for the those who don't have it.
DD's teacher is doing this in summer school too. Parents are very annoyed and it's unprofessional. I understand if she needs to do it sometimes due to her having her own kids at home or some other issue that comes up but to do it as a matter of policy is pretty lazy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe it helps with bandwidth issues. We do this at work all the time for that reason.
There’s a difference between attendees and basically listeners having their camera off and presenters, moron.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe it helps with bandwidth issues. We do this at work all the time for that reason.
Oh, yes! I’m the teacher above and I forgot about this! If she’s on her chromebook the quality significantly decreases when more participants join. Keeping the camera off improves the audio and general quality of the meeting.
I still stand by my previous response though. Email and ask. If she responds that it’s a bandwidth issue, ask her who you should contact at the school to help make sure that all teachers have the appropriate equipment to fix this problem by the fall.
Hint: we need something other than chromebooks or to find a platform that performs better with it.
Anonymous wrote:I asked about this and my child said the teacher is not sharing slides or screens. She’s just literally talking and has turned her video off.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe it helps with bandwidth issues. We do this at work all the time for that reason.
Anonymous wrote:Same here. My students see me at the beginning and end of classes but most of class is me sharing slides, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe it helps with bandwidth issues. We do this at work all the time for that reason.
Anonymous wrote:My students didn’t see me when I was presenting slides, or sharing my screen in any way, like using the whiteboard function to demonstrate problems. Is this not normal? If I knew there was a way to show my face as well as sharing my screen I would have, but was unaware there was a way. Most of my zoom classes were using the whiteboard, so my students saw me at the beginning and the end but that was it. I tried switching back and forth at the beginning, but it got confusing because students could see what I was talking about.
Anonymous wrote:Is this normal? She showed her face the first two days and then stopped. My kid is 9/4th grade. And no, nothing is wrong with our computer, teacher is alive and well, blah blah blah.