


When prompted to select what you want to share, click the Advanced tab, select Content from 2nd Camera, and click Share. On your computer, connect to your Zoom meeting.If you have a second external USB webcam, you can use it as a makeshift document camera: Use the following options if you do not have access to a touch-enabled device, such as a tablet or touch-screen laptop. Meeting participants or those who view your recording will see any annotations you make in the application while sharing your screen. Many applications (such as Word, PowerPoint, and Notability) have built-in annotation tools that you can use while sharing your screen in Zoom. Native collaboration tools in other applications If you would like to annotate the screen share without allowing your participants to annotate it, see Restrict and clear annotations.įor more, see Using annotation tools on a shared screen or whiteboard.

Once you have enabled the annotation tool, you and your participants will be able to annotate your screen share. However, you can enable this setting as described in Using annotation tools. When sharing your screen in Zoom, you can pause the share and use Zoom's annotation tools to draw freehand and insert basic shapes, lines, and text on the screen.īy default, neither you nor your participants will be able to annotate your screen share. You can create new pages on your virtual whiteboard, and save whiteboards as image files to review later.īy default, live meeting participants will also be able to draw on the whiteboard you can change this setting after initiating a whiteboard session.įor more, see Using annotation tools on a shared screen or whiteboard.

Zoom lets you share a virtual whiteboard, which has tools for freehand drawing and inserting basic shapes, lines, and text. Use the following options if you have a touch-enabled device, such as a tablet or touch-screen laptop. In Zoom, you can simulate the experience of using a whiteboard or document camera to share handwritten content while teaching, whether you use Zoom for live class sessions or to pre-record content for your class. If you're teaching from a general inventory classroom, see Recommendations for using technology in IU classrooms with hybrid or virtual learning.
