Online classes move fast. Between following the instructor, taking notes, and participating in discussions, it's nearly impossible to absorb everything the first time through. Recording the class for later review is one of the most effective study habits you can develop.
This guide covers how to record online classes across different platforms — Zoom, Google Meet, Microsoft Teams, and browser-based lecture systems — along with the legal and ethical considerations you should know.
Record Any Online Class in 30 Seconds
Screen Recorder Pro works with Zoom, Google Meet, Teams, and any browser-based class. No app, no account, no hassle.
Add to Chrome — FreeBefore You Record: Legal and Ethical Considerations
Before hitting record, understand the rules:
- Most universities allow personal note-taking recordings — Recording for your own study use is generally treated similarly to written notes. Check your institution's acceptable use policy.
- Distribution is usually prohibited — Sharing a recording of a class with people outside the class, posting it online, or selling it is almost universally against the rules and likely a copyright violation.
- Instructor consent is courteous — Even if allowed, letting your instructor know you're recording is professional courtesy. Most won't object when the purpose is personal review.
- Online course platforms have their own rules — Coursera, Udemy, and LinkedIn Learning prohibit recording in their Terms of Service, regardless of purpose.
Method 1: Chrome Extension (Works on Any Platform)
The most versatile approach. Works whether your class is on Zoom web, Google Meet, Microsoft Teams for web, Canvas Live, or any other browser-based platform.
Install Screen Recorder Pro from the Chrome Web Store
Takes about 10 seconds. No account required. Pin the extension to your toolbar for quick access.
Join your class in Chrome as normal
Open the Zoom web link, Google Meet URL, or your course platform in Chrome. Get logged in and positioned before class starts.
Click the extension icon and start recording
Choose "Tab" to capture just the class tab, or "Desktop" to capture your full screen including any notes you're taking. Enable audio to capture the instructor's voice.
Let the class run and participate normally
The recording runs in the background. You can switch tabs to look things up — if you chose Tab recording, only the class tab is captured. If you chose Desktop, your full screen is captured.
Stop recording when class ends
Click the extension icon or the floating stop button. Your recording downloads automatically to your Downloads folder.
Recording on Specific Platforms
Zoom (As a Student)
Zoom's built-in recording requires host permission. As a student, use the web client at zoom.us to join — then a Chrome extension captures the meeting tab smooth$1. Alternatively, if your instructor enables recording for all participants, you can use Zoom's built-in Alt+R shortcut to start local recording.
Google Meet (As a Student)
Google Meet's native recording is only available to Google Workspace admins and meeting organizers with certain paid plans. Students using a personal Google account cannot use Meet's built-in recording. A Chrome extension captures the Meet tab perfectly, including video and audio of all participants.
Microsoft Teams
Teams requires the organizer to enable recording, and recordings go to Microsoft Stream (cloud only). For local recording without organizer permission, join Teams in Chrome's browser interface (not the desktop app) and use a screen recording extension. Alternatively, Teams meetings opened in the browser can be captured at the OS level using Windows Xbox Game Bar.
Canvas / Blackboard Collaborate
These LMS platforms sometimes have their own recording features that instructors can enable. Check with your instructor. If not available, any Chrome extension records these platforms the same as any other website.
Works with Every Learning Platform
Zoom, Meet, Teams, Blackboard, Canvas — Screen Recorder Pro captures any class your browser can run.
Install Screen Recorder ProGetting Good Audio Quality for Class Recordings
Audio quality makes or breaks a class recording. Poor audio means you can't understand the instructor when reviewing. Here's how to improve it:
- Use Tab recording mode: This captures the audio that's playing through your browser, including the instructor's voice as transmitted through the meeting. This is usually cleaner than recording your microphone's pickup of your speakers.
- Use headphones: When in Tab recording mode, your headphone output is what gets captured. Good headphones connected to a quality audio card produce better recording quality than laptop speakers.
- Ensure the instructor's mic is working: If the instructor sounds muffled in the live class, they'll sound muffled in your recording. The recording quality can't exceed the source quality.
- Test beforehand: Record 30 seconds of a previous lecture replay or practice session to verify your setup captures audio correctly before your real class.
Managing Class Recording Files
A 2-hour lecture can be a large file. Here's how to manage recordings effectively:
| Recording Duration | Approximate File Size (1080p WebM) | Storage Recommendation |
|---|---|---|
| 30 minutes | 500MB – 1.5GB | Local SSD sufficient |
| 1 hour | 1 – 3GB | External drive or cloud backup |
| 2 hours | 2 – 6GB | Dedicated folder structure on external drive |
| Full semester (40 lectures) | 80 – 240GB | External drive + cloud backup mandatory |
Classes/2026-Spring/Professor-Name/Week-01/. Name files with the date and topic: 2026-03-19-neural-networks-intro.webm. This makes finding specific lectures much easier when exam season arrives.
Using Your Recordings Effectively for Studying
Recording the class is only valuable if you actually use the recordings well:
- Watch at 1.25x–1.5x speed for review — saves significant time while remaining comprehensible
- Use chapter markers or timestamps if your video player supports them
- Review within 24 hours when memory is freshest — recordings are for clarification, not first learning
- Jump to specific sections you marked as confusing during the live class
- Don't rely solely on recordings — attending live, asking questions, and engaging is still how most learning happens
Frequently Asked Questions
Is it legal to record an online class or lecture?
Recording for personal study is generally permitted under educational fair use, but rules vary by institution. Always check your school's acceptable use policy. Recording and sharing or distributing a lecture commercially without permission is a copyright violation. Many institutions explicitly allow personal note-taking recordings while prohibiting distribution.
Can I record a Coursera or Udemy video class?
Coursera and Udemy prohibit downloading or recording their video content per their Terms of Service. Many courses offer downloadable content for offline viewing within their mobile apps as an alternative. Review each platform's terms before recording.
How do I record a live Zoom class as a student?
In Zoom, only the host or co-hosts can use Zoom's built-in recording unless the host grants permission. As a student, your best option is a screen recording extension that captures your browser tab. This records what you see on screen including video and audio from the class.
Will my professor know if I record the class?
If you use Zoom's built-in recording, Zoom displays a recording indicator to all participants. If you use a separate screen recording tool or browser extension, no notification is sent to the platform or the instructor. However, you should always follow your institution's recording policy.
How much storage space does a 1-hour class recording use?
A 1-hour screen recording at 1080p typically uses 1–4GB depending on encoder and quality settings. At 720p, expect 500MB–2GB. WebM format from Chrome extensions tends to be smaller than MP4 for equivalent quality.
Can I record a class on Google Meet as a student?
Google Meet's built-in recording is only available to the host on paid Workspace plans. As a student, you can use a Chrome screen recording extension to capture the meeting tab. This works regardless of whether the host has recording enabled.