Blog Post
PeteBrown1
Community Member
Hi Tom
I think that if PowerPoint did the things you've specified easily there'd be no need for specialist quiz products like QuizMaker!
That said, most, if not all, of what you've described could probably be done in PowerPoint using VBA macro functions. For example, in broad terms you could:
1. Specify a global variable, e.g. TotScore
2. Increment TotScore by 1 whenever someone clicked specific buttons (i.e. the correct answers) on any slide in the presentation
3. If TotScore was greater than your desired passing score you could set another variable PassStatus to 'Passed' otherwise set PassStatus to 'Not Passed' and display that on a certificate slide.
This wouldn't be foolproof. Anyone who knew their way around PowerPoint could probably reverse-engineer the correct answers by poking around the backend of PowerPoint.
Anyhoo, just my two cents' worth based on what you asked. Someone else may have a better idea.
Good Luck!
I think that if PowerPoint did the things you've specified easily there'd be no need for specialist quiz products like QuizMaker!
That said, most, if not all, of what you've described could probably be done in PowerPoint using VBA macro functions. For example, in broad terms you could:
1. Specify a global variable, e.g. TotScore
2. Increment TotScore by 1 whenever someone clicked specific buttons (i.e. the correct answers) on any slide in the presentation
3. If TotScore was greater than your desired passing score you could set another variable PassStatus to 'Passed' otherwise set PassStatus to 'Not Passed' and display that on a certificate slide.
This wouldn't be foolproof. Anyone who knew their way around PowerPoint could probably reverse-engineer the correct answers by poking around the backend of PowerPoint.
Anyhoo, just my two cents' worth based on what you asked. Someone else may have a better idea.
Good Luck!
TomPigram
6 years agoCommunity Member
Thanks Pete Brown - its a reasonable option to continue to play with pptx...but like you said, Quizmaker was made to fill a gap :) So this exercise has cost more than I budgeted - but this is how projects go sometimes - even if you are doing the work for noble reasons :)
All the best
All the best
- stewartmilton6 years agoCommunity MemberTom, i hope you don't me jumping in. PPT was never really designed for quizzing as such and Pete's advice is bang on. There are 2 aspects to think about - quizzing and the results/analysis. At the moment I am creating courses for approx 1700 learners, the questions have been created in Storyline 3 and the courses containing these have been uploaded to our LMS (BlackBoard) as Scorm files. When learners complete these courses and quiz questions the results are recorded in grade centre.
Now dependng on these results I have set up conditions on our LMS and if a user meets them i.e. more than 50% then BlackBoard provides a completion certificate for the user. If you have smaller numbers of learners then you may be able to provide the lessons without an LMS but for larger scale courses an LMS is essential to manage the users, record scores, produce reports/certs and to meet audit/compliance regulations from your organisation or other parties.- TomPigram6 years agoCommunity Member...not at all Stewart :)
As I indicated...I was just hoping to avoid learning another application :) You are most certainly correct when you indicate one of the real tasks of an LMS is to administrate the learners - for without this part of the application - such as corrrectand consistent marking and certificate awarding (and recording these things) then eLearning would quickly be irrelevent. I am all for an LMS....but my request was to discover if someone had been able to find a clever way to use powerpoint yet :) Thanks for your comments