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Complaint Regarding Meeting Controls in Microsoft Teams

Angela Jane B. Biol 0 Reputation points
2026-04-28T03:32:07.29+00:00

Is it possible for Microsoft Teams to include a transparency feature that identifies which participant removed a user from a meeting or placed them in Spotlight, especially to help prevent misuse in educational settings?

In my experience, some of my blockmates use these features to remove others from the meeting or repeatedly place them in the spotlight as a form of joke or disruption. This behavior is not only distracting but also disrespectful, especially during class hours. Being removed multiple times or forced into the spotlight unnecessarily has caused frustration not just for me, but also for some of my classmates.

Microsoft Teams | Microsoft Teams for education | Meetings and calls | Audio and video
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  1. Sophie N 14,455 Reputation points Microsoft External Staff Moderator
    2026-04-28T04:27:04.3433333+00:00

    Dear @Angela Jane B. Biol,

    Thank you for reaching out and sharing your experience. I understand how frustrating it is when meeting features are misused, especially in an educational environment where focus and respect are essential.

    Currently, Microsoft Teams does not provide a built-in notification or visible log during a meeting that identifies which specific participant removed a user or placed them in the spotlight.

    While IT administrators can sometimes access backend audit logs for certain activities, specific meeting actions like "Spotlighting" or "Removing a participant" are generally not recorded in a way that is accessible to students or teachers in real-time.

    The most effective way to stop this behavior is to ensure that students are joined as Attendees rather than Presenters. Only "Presenters" and "Organizers" have the authority to remove others or manage the spotlight.

    I recommend suggesting that your teacher or meeting organizer implement these settings:

    1. Change Meeting Options: Before the meeting starts, the organizer should go to Meeting Options.
    2. Set "Who can present?": Change this setting to "Only me" or "Specific people" (e.g., only the teacher).
    3. The Result: All other students will join as Attendees. Attendees cannot: Remove other participants, mute others, spotlight anyone (including themselves).

    User's image

    For more detailed instructions, you can refer to the official Microsoft documentation: Roles in Microsoft Teams meetings - Microsoft Support

    If a meeting is already in progress, the organizer can quickly fix this:

    1. Open the Participants list.
    2. Select More options at the top and choose Meeting options.
    3. Adjust the "Who can present?" setting to Only me and click Save. This will instantly demote all students to "Attendee" status and revoke their ability to disrupt the call. 

    For more detailed instructions, you can refer to the official Microsoft documentation: Meeting options in Microsoft Teams - Microsoft Support

    I hope this helps resolve the disruptions in your classes! Please let me know if you need any further assistance.


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  2. Q&A Assist
    2026-04-28T03:32:19.48+00:00
    AI generated content. This question contains an answer created with AI from Q&A Assist. Learn more

    Microsoft Teams does not currently provide a transparency feature that shows which specific participant removed someone from a meeting or who placed a participant in Spotlight.

    However, there are built-in controls that organizers and educators can use to reduce or prevent this kind of misuse in class meetings by limiting who has presenter-level permissions (since presenters can remove others and control spotlighting):

    1. Limit who can be a presenter before the meeting
      In the meeting options, set Who can present to Only me or Specific people. This ensures most students join as attendees, not presenters. Attendees cannot remove others or manage elevated meeting controls.
    2. Control presenter/attendee roles during the meeting
      If a student needs to present, temporarily promote them:
      1. Select Show participants in the call controls.
      2. Right-click or tap and hold the student’s name.
      3. Select Make a presenter so they can share content.
      4. When finished, right-click or tap and hold their name again and select Make an attendee to remove those extra controls.
    3. Control who can bypass the lobby
      To prevent students from joining unattended and misusing controls before the educator arrives, set Who can bypass the lobby to Only me. This ensures students wait in the lobby until admitted.
    4. Manage disruptive participants
      If someone is being disruptive:
      1. Select Show participants.
      2. Right-click or tap and hold their name.
      3. Select Remove participant.
        Ensure lobby options are configured so they cannot rejoin without going through the lobby.
    5. Use attendee audio/chat controls
      To reduce disruption further in class scenarios:
      • Set Allow attendees to unmute to No so only the organizer can unmute students.
      • Adjust Allow meeting chat to Disabled or In-meeting only to control when students can send messages.

    For the requested transparency feature (showing who removed or spotlighted whom), this would need to be submitted as product feedback through official Microsoft feedback channels, as it is not available in the current feature set described in the provided documentation.


    References:

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