Weekly Recap: Avert an E-Learning Cliff with These Tips & Insights from the Articulate Community
Feb182013
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Looming deadlines? Budget constraints? Production schedule amendments? Last-minute SME negotiations breaking down? You have a lot at stake in your courses. That’s why you need a community of bipartisan designers willing to reach across the aisle, help you tackle the toughest challenges, and steer you—and your projects—to recovery. For more ways to keep your e-learning in the black, check out last week’s highlights:
Community tutorials:
- How to build interactive job aids in Articulate Engage
- Exporting Stubborn PowerPoint Audio for Import into Articulate Presenter
- How to create a start video layer in Articulate Storyline
- How to begin your Articulate Storyline course in a paused state
- Requiring learners to listen to slide audio in Articulate Storyline before clicking a menu button
- How to quickly and easily convert a Multiple Choice question to Pick Many question in Articulate Storyline
- How to make bullet color different than the associated text in Articulate Storyline
Conversations in the community:
- New adventure
- Best approach for internal bookmarking
- Advice on different authors collaborating on the same project
- What guidance do you give your e-learning beta testers?
- Making Storyline projects easy for SME review
- Scenario training with lots of need-to-know information
- Creating an e-learning portfolio
New blog posts:
- Convert Your Bullet Points to Interactive E-Learning with Video
- Dear Word of Mouth
- Video Workshop: Customizing Branching Quizzes in Quizmaker ’09
Seen on Twitter:
- @mark_articulate shared a link where #Articulate higher-ed customers can nominate their favorite success stories at the Campus Technology Innovator Awards
- @Tracy_Parish shared a link to her amazing list for learning a few of lesser known #Articulate #Studio tips & tricks
- @OmniplexeLearn shared a link to an interview with @tomkuhlmann on his take on interactivity
- @mlearning shared a link to Dos and Don’ts for Successful Web Videos