Versions Compared

Key

  • This line was added.
  • This line was removed.
  • Formatting was changed.

...

An external guest is a participant in a CUE-hosted Google Meet who does not use (or have) a CUE Google account.  They may be an invited speaker, a contractor, or any other sort of individual participating in a CUE meeting or class.  They are distinguished from CUE participants, who are anyone participating in the Google Meet using their CUE Google account (either @student.concordia.ab.ca or @concordia.ab.ca).  Therefore, an instructor or student who connects to a Google Meet and does not use their CUE Google account will be treated as an external user.

Unlike CUE participants, external guests may are not always automatically permitted entry into Google Meets.  If the account they are invited with is not a Google account (and they are not signed in), they will need to make a request to join, which must be approved by the meeting host, before entering.  If the external guest that was invited to a Meet is logged in to Google with the same account that was invited (even if not a part of CUE), they will be directly admitted into the meeting.  This means that your external users will have slightly different experience based on their organization's setup (are they a Google G Suite user?) and whether they are logged into that account when they try to join the meeting.

...

  1. If you are unsure whether you are the host of an upcoming meeting, you can enter the room (at any time) and look for the "Host controls" options as seen above.  If it is missing, you are not considered the host/organizer.
  2. If you have access to calendars from various accounts, make sure you are creating the calendar event (and corresponding Google Meet) with the account that you are going to be joining the meeting with.  For example, if you have an individual calendar and a shared office calendar that events are managed on, be sure to create the event on the individual calendar, send out the invites (including, as needed, the shared calendar account) and be logged into that same account when you join the meeting at its scheduled time.
  3. If a calendar event (and corresponding Google Meet) is owned by an account that will not be logging into the meeting to host, the event can be easily transferred to a different owner.  Google's guidance on this is found here: Transfer Google calendars or events  Transferring the event ownership will also transfer the meeting host role.
  4. If you are the event organizer, but are not seeing the host controls, you can try removing, saving, then readding a new Google Meet room, though this will mean that you need to send out updated invitations to all participants.
  5. If you had problems with a past meeting and are still not sure where the problem is, feel free to reach out to IT Services for further assistance.