 Laura says, I'm trying to use forms more often as we all should be. It's great, mostly because of the translate features and it keeps us organized. I like to create the work as an assignment under the Assignment tab in Teams. But is there a way that students can leave the form for a day or two and come back and complete it without losing their work? On this last assignment, I created my assignment in Teams as a forms quiz, and I checked and it seemed to save if you did not finish right away. But we are continuing to work on the activity today, and there is a near revolt in my class because the work they did has now disappeared. The due date that I chose is not past due. I wish I could say yes, but at the moment forms does not allow you to be able to do a save. Not unless you're in the full dynamics and you've got pro and you're in education, so you won't actually have that. You might have to look at a different way if you know that you've got to come and go on something forms is not going to be the solution for you. Absolutely. The only other workaround I can think of is to create it in a SharePoint list and make a PowerApp out of it. Then they would be able to go back and edit their entries, but that would take some development. I don't know if that's worth the investment for one assignment, but that is a workaround if somebody has the need to have somebody be able to start and stop on a submission in a form of some kind. Forms is friendly and helpful, but it's meant to be more of a survey, one-shot tool and not an ongoing. The one thing that I have seen that may answer part of this, is just a different way of looking at building out the forms around this. Because I've seen people that have embedded a single form within a presentation that might have embedded video, use it as a training guide, and then it gets to a certain point, they fill out questions, they answer questions there as part of the form, and it all goes back to one form. But you could create, you could chunk it up, you could break it into pieces that are separate forms. Right, so if you think that you're going to, that you might want to have flexibility in breaking up that content, break it out into logical sections, create a separate form for each one of those, so then you get past the limitation of this version of forms, the non-pro version. Yeah, we should actually ask the question, we should post it to some of our Microsoft folks, Max or somebody who might know the answer, maybe Neil knows as well, whether some of the pro capabilities of forms are going to become an option for the education sector or something, but unfortunately we can't answer that today. Yeah, and again, if you're creating that in multiple forms, it's captured in separate data sources, which could be an Excel spreadsheet, or you can use Power Automate to stamp it into a SharePoint list or Microsoft list and re-consolidate them. So it would be one entry per person, but the way that if you break it up is going to be multiple exports, and you're going to have to re-consolidate them if that's what you need to do for a total score or something. That's why I say it's depending on your approach. If you think this is something where, hey, I want to have more flexibility, then it's probably worth the extra time that it takes to do that setup so that you can deliver it more spread out and not worry about losing data. Just means that you need to finish a section and finish those sub-forms. You need to complete the entire survey before moving on to the next section. Yeah, or quiz because the difference between the form and a quiz is that you can add a right or wrong answer to the quiz as well as a score. So you do have that capability. People forget, you hit the little drop down, it's not just a form, there are quizzes in there too. Yeah, it's actually in the feedback. It's in the feedback portal. I mean, it's something that's been around right back since like 2020. You know, and I know that it keeps getting voted like at the moment, they allow the form respondents to continue to fill it out later. It's got 4,402 votes and 65 comments against it, and it's still open. So it's something that's been around for some time. They really wanted, but yeah, yeah. I'm happy to put the link in and everyone can continue to vote. Add it to the notes, we'll add it.