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3 Things You’ll Love About the New Microlearning Feature in Rise 360

AllisonLaMotte's avatar
2 years ago

If you’re like many course authors, you’ve been creating microlearning courses with Rise 360 for years. After all, delivering training in short bursts is a great way to improve knowledge retention and make it easy for learners to grow their skills despite their busy schedules.

And now, thanks to the new Rise 360 microlearning feature, you can create bite-size courses your learners will love faster than ever. 

Let us walk you through how it’ll save you time and give you more control over the learning experience.

1. Get useful content out fast by starting from a template

If you’ve created microlearning before, you know that it often takes longer to design effective short-form content because of how strategic you have to be about what you include.

But now, with Rise 360, you can save time by choosing from a library of templates designed specifically for microlearning. This library includes:

  • Real-content templates, which are ready to publish as is but are also easy to customize if needed.
  • Placeholder-content templates, which feature a prebuilt course structure with tips on what to incorporate. So all that’s left to do is pop in your content and you’re good to go!

No matter which option you choose, these professionally designed templates will help you get single-objective courses out to learners fast—whether it’s your first microlearning or your fiftieth. 

2. Quickly create custom bite-size learning experiences

It’s always been fast and easy to create custom microlearning from scratch with Rise 360, but this cool new feature shaves even more time off your course-creation workflow. That’s because it automatically takes care of many of the microlearning layout and navigation customization steps you might have done manually in the past.

Before

After

Instead of creating a course, adding a lesson, and hiding the menu to create a microlearning feel, just select Create Microlearning and start adding blocks. It’s as simple as that! 

3. Focus learners’ attention With Stepped Navigation Mode 

Whether you start from scratch or use a template, the new microlearning feature also gives you an all-new option for directing your learners’ attention and helping them focus in on your content: Stepped Navigation Mode. As the name implies, this setting allows you to display content one step at a time—making it easier to digest.

Stepped navigation defaults to showing a single block for each step, but if you need to combine blocks to get a point across, that’s easy to adjust. You can  connect and disconnect blocks in just a few clicks to design an optimal learning experience.

Wrap-Up

The new Rise 360 microlearning feature will help you get great short-form content out quickly. We can’t wait to see what you’ll create!

Want to learn more about this new feature? Be sure to check out this overview video:

As always, if you have any questions or comments, please leave them in the space below! And be sure to follow us on Twitter and LinkedIn and come back to E-Learning Heroes for more helpful advice on everything related to e-learning. 

Published 2 years ago
Version 1.0
  • I've wondered if the it's more intuitive to have the navigation arrows in the middle of the page versus off the right. I know mostly you can advance by scrolling.

    But people taking courses in my org sometimes don't notice the arrows off to right, so I add a "navigation hint". Would be nice not to add that.
  • Hi, has anyone used the new Rise 360 microlearning as a presentation tool? Say instead of using PowerPoint for facilitated learning. If so, would you be willing to share your experience? It's been posed to me that this would be a good direction to go. I have been a learner in a test and learn of doing this and I'm not convinced.
    • AllisonLaMotte's avatar
      AllisonLaMotte
      Staff
      Hi Adam,
      I've definitely done this! I find it's so much quicker and easier than building a PowerPoint presentation and looks so sharp. Not to mention then it's easy to share with people who want to review it afterward.
      • AdamBloomfield-'s avatar
        AdamBloomfield-
        Community Member
        Is there anywhere you could lead me to a good example of doing this? I'd love to see it in action, from what I've seen so far it's simply been an online learning experience put up as a facilitated session.
  • RachelSirr's avatar
    RachelSirr
    Community Member
    What are the advantages of using the microlearning feature vs creating a one-lesson course? (aside from speed/having templates). Is it easier to share the microlearning (outside an LMS - e.g. via a Slack channel/email?)
    • AllisonLaMotte's avatar
      AllisonLaMotte
      Staff
      Hi Rachel,
      Sorry for the delay, I didn't see your question until now. The main advantage of the microlearning option is that there's no menu and you can choose to use the stepped navigation.
  • Is there any way to embed one of these microlearning modules into a larger rise course module? I love the clean appearance, useability and adaptability for all devices but for the kind of learning we create a text-based menu is essential
    • AllisonLaMotte's avatar
      AllisonLaMotte
      Staff
      Hi Megan,
      There's not currently a way to combine microlearning and full-length Rise 360 courses. But full-length Rise 360 courses are also responsive. Are you wanting to do this mostly to take advantage of the stepped navigation?
      • MeganCastles-6a's avatar
        MeganCastles-6a
        Community Member
        Hi Alison,
        Yeah, the clean-stepped navigation, to focus on learning bites one at a time, rather than having to use continue buttons to get this effect in a lesson. Ideally would like to be able to use that microlearning style as a built-in interaction or lesson option in a larger course file.
  • Is there a way to restrict navigation in a microlearning course? I would like to make sure the learner has completed all the content before moving through to the next section.
    • AllisonLaMotte's avatar
      AllisonLaMotte
      Staff
      Hi Courtney,
      The best way to do this would be to use the Continue button, like in a regular Rise 360 course :)
  • HPLife's avatar
    HPLife
    Community Member
    Hi, I don't think storyline blocks work in the microlearning format on mobile. The navigation up and down arrows cover the bottom of the storyline block stopping interactions!