In discussions, you can share thoughts and ideas about class materials. In Blackboard Learn, course members can have the thoughtful discussions that take place in the traditional classroom, but with the advantages of asynchronous communication. Participants don't need to be in the same location or time zone, and you can take the time to consider your responses carefully.

You can use discussions for these tasks:

  • Meet with your peers for collaboration and social interaction.
  • Pose questions about homework assignments, readings, and course content.
  • Demonstrate your understanding or application of course material.

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Access a discussion

Discussions are an online forum about course concepts. Your instructor may expect you to create your own discussions and participate in existing ones. Your instructor can also grade your contributions.

Your instructor can create group discussions for you to discuss a topic with a group of your classmates.

More on group discussions

The Discussions page will only be accessible in your course if your instructor has created discussions or given students permission to make new discussions.

If your instructor added due dates for graded discussions, you can access discussions from your Grades page, the calendar, and the Activity page.

You can go to the Discussions page from the Course Content page to access all discussions at once. Discussions can also be with other course materials on the Course Content page.

The Course Content page, with Discussions page at the top

Each time you visit a discussion, new responses and replies are labeled with "NEW" to bring attention to any activity that's happened since your last visit.

More on creating responses and replies

Discussions are organized into posts and replies. Unless a discussion is posted anonymously, the author's name is included with each post. You can select a discussion participant to filter to only their posts.

Home page of a discussion, where you can access posts and find more information

Post a response first

Your instructor may require you to respond to a discussion before you can read other responses and replies. When you "post first," you aren't influenced by your classmates' responses. When you access this type of discussion, you'll receive the following message: Post a response to see discussion activity. You can't view discussion activity yet. Responses and replies appear when you post a response.

The Participants list won't include the number of others' responses and replies until you post a response.


Create a discussion

You can create discussions for your classmates to participate in. Your instructor can delete any discussions, responses, and replies.

More about deleting your discussions, responses, and replies

Go to the Discussions page in your course. Select New Discussion.

Discussions page, with the New Discussion button at the top

On the New Discussion page, enter a meaningful title. Choose your discussion title carefully. After you leave the title line, the discussion title saves. Only your instructor can edit the title.

New Discussion page, with the text editor visible

Get the discussion started with a question, idea, or response. You can use the options in the editor to format text, attach files, and embed multimedia. If you access the editor on a small screen, select the Insert content button to view the menu of options. For example, select Insert/Edit Local Files. Browse for a file from your device. A status window appears to show the progress of the file upload.

To use your keyboard to jump to the editor toolbar, press ALT + F10. On a Mac, press Fn + ALT + F10. Use the arrow keys to select an option, such as a numbered list.

Select Save when you're done.

On the main Discussions page, your discussion title has the label Created by student.

Discussions page, with a 'Created by student' label beneath a discussion

When course members access your discussion, you're listed as the author.

You may edit or delete your own posts and may delete your own discussions if no one has responded.


Anonymous discussions

Your instructor can choose to allow students to post to discussions anonymously. If the option is available, select Post anonymously before posting. If you post anonymously, authorized users can still reveal your identity in cases of misuse, such as bullying.

A student is replying to a discussion prompt with the Post Anonymously option selected

Watch a video about participating in discussions

The following narrated video provides a visual and auditory representation of some of the information included on this page. For a detailed description of what is portrayed in the video, open the video on Vimeo.

Video: Participate in discussions explains how to participate in discussions.