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Pharr, Olivia
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Expertise Search
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Hancock , Billy
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Located in
Expertise Search
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Plone Content and Display Choices
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Table of Contents, Previous Next Functionality
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Help
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General User Support
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How to Use MeetingSphere
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Located in
Help
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General User Support
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MeetingSphere Commands, common functions and tools
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The "Command" menu provides help on commands, features and functions that run across several or all MeetingSphere tools:
Located in
Help
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General User Support
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How to Use MeetingSphere
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General Help for Hosts in MeetingSphere
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MeetingSphere provides a set of interactive, self-documenting tools. In their default configuration, these tools cover the typical use cases of face-to-face or online sessions. Experienced users will use advanced settings to support more intricate methodologies and facilitation techniques.
In the process of building a session agenda, tools are added to the relevant Agenda stages to produce the required outcome of the session.
The following table describes the MeetingSphere tools by their primary and intended uses. Once you know them, you will discover many more.
Located in
Help
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General User Support
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How to Use MeetingSphere
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How to Delete items during an active MeetingSphere session
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Delete can be performed by hosts and participants can delete content they shared during a meeting.
Located in
Help
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General User Support
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How to Use MeetingSphere
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files in Energy Final Narrative (appLCC Funded Research)
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Located in
Tools
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Assessing Future Energy Development
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About the Partnership
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Region-Based
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A role of the Appalachian LCC community -- representing scientists and natural and cultural resource managers from federal and state agencies, non-profit organizations, and tribal government representatives -- is to help coordinate and plan conservation actions at a landscape level. Based on guidance from this conservation community, the LCC staff and partners are identifying and concentrating their efforts in working with interested partners in "focal areas."
These initial areas of collaborative planning and coordinated action represent conservation zones -- identified through our EDIT Needed: Landscape Conservation Design modeling effort -- that offer conservation opportunities for long-term protection of immense and unique biodiversity by maintaining connectivity among natural lands and functioning ecosystems. Such strategic planning and collaboration will help address environmental threats that are beyond the ability of any one organization to tackle and lead to the protection of valued natural and cultural resources and continued delivery of environmental benefits to surrounding human communities across the Appalachians and its western river basin.