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E-Learning Challenges
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Re: How Do Course Designers Collaborate in E-learning Development? #435

JodiSansone's avatar
JodiSansone
Community Member
3 years ago
Practice Asking Open-End Questions to Promote Collaboration
Demo: https://jodisdemos.s3.amazonaws.com/435+Collaboration/story.html
Review 360 Version: https://360.articulate.com/review/content/2f08e1b3-25b9-4f10-b4e9-2c64febd70eb/review

Here's a demo about how to encourage collaboration with your clients or stakeholders by getting them to talk more about their expectations. I posted it in AWS and Review 360--if you want to leave comments in Review it will help me get used to the new comment panel. I like the idea of the panel showing up in Storyline 360, but I hate the placement of it. I've been using it this month on a client project since the Beta was released, and I find it hard to deal with as it is wedged between triggers and layers. It is hard to read a long comment, but I'm open to your thoughts on why I should like it better. :) Have a great week!
Published 3 years ago
Version 1.0

5 Comments

  • Ange's avatar
    Ange
    Community Member
    Brilliant! The art of conversation.
    I would also love to know how others use the comments section in SL to enhance their workflow. I agree with it being "hard to deal with"—clunky! I undocked it when it first came out to test its usability, made it larger so it was easier to follow long comments. but I gave up. I find it more agreeable and effective to open both the review link and the SL file and flip between the two instead of undocking / redocking.
      • Ange's avatar
        Ange
        Community Member
        I tried posting a comment for your review panel "training":) but there is a message saying "Comments offline", will try again later.
  • Jonathan_Hill's avatar
    Jonathan_Hill
    Super Hero
    Like the opportunities you've included to practice, check and reflect here, Jodi. As always it looks great too.
  • AshiTandon's avatar
    AshiTandon
    Community Member
    Nice work! I liked toggling between open- and closed-end communication.