Blog Post
TracyCarroll
Community Member
Hi all, I'm almost brand-new to the challenges. (I posted something last week to an old challenge, but I doubt anyone has seen it!)
I decided to see what I could do with this challenge in under 2 hours. First I outlined the elements the course would contain: http://tracycarroll.net/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/OSHA.pdf
Then I immediately decided to check and see if a likely template was available for download on the Articulate website. I found Allison LaMotte's Sleek Custom UI Template, thought it was beautiful, and decided to go with that. I had Tim Slade's Trivia Game template already. I tweaked the appearance of both templates, and dropped in some dummy text & images.
I didn't get much into specific scenarios or interactions, though! (I confess I didn't read much of the PowerPoint source material.) My prototype basically shows the structure of the course I'm proposing, and the elements that would go into the course. It's at: http://tracycarroll.net/OSHA/story.html
I decided to see what I could do with this challenge in under 2 hours. First I outlined the elements the course would contain: http://tracycarroll.net/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/OSHA.pdf
Then I immediately decided to check and see if a likely template was available for download on the Articulate website. I found Allison LaMotte's Sleek Custom UI Template, thought it was beautiful, and decided to go with that. I had Tim Slade's Trivia Game template already. I tweaked the appearance of both templates, and dropped in some dummy text & images.
I didn't get much into specific scenarios or interactions, though! (I confess I didn't read much of the PowerPoint source material.) My prototype basically shows the structure of the course I'm proposing, and the elements that would go into the course. It's at: http://tracycarroll.net/OSHA/story.html
JaneMaduke
10 years agoCommunity Member
Thanks for the outline, Tracy! It's very helpful. I think the biggest challenge here is to present all that information! The first step is breaking it down and that's what you've done here for us.
I also like how you think! Checking out templates to get the creative juices flowing and leveraging others' work makes it easier too. And no one can blame you for not reading the source material. That really is too much like work! Well done.
I also like how you think! Checking out templates to get the creative juices flowing and leveraging others' work makes it easier too. And no one can blame you for not reading the source material. That really is too much like work! Well done.
- DavidAnderson10 years agoStaff"And no one can blame you for not reading the source material."
So that's a really great point, Jane! I never thought to mention that but that's exactly what this challenge is about:-)
When I put my sample together, I opened the 194-slide preso in Slide Sorter view and skimmed for different content ideas. I wanted find content for static slides, quiz slides, step-by-step interactions, tabs interactions, basic quizzes, and drag-drop interactions. I couldn't find any step interactions so I faked it using the Fall Rescue Procedures.
I basically took selected slides from the source PowerPoint and forced (gently) them into common interaction slides.- JaneMaduke10 years agoCommunity MemberThis is a good process, too, David! I didn't think to use the slide sorter view. Next time I'm faced with 150+ slides, I'll do just that.
- TracyCarroll10 years agoCommunity MemberThanks, Jane! For me, the outline is key. I would use that when talking with the client, to explain the structure of the course.
I've updated my blog post to include each of the E-Learning challenges I've participated in: http://wp.me/p4yyFg-1vg- AlyssaGomez10 years agoStaffI agree, Tracy! The outline is key! I always start with an outline and consistently refer back to it throughout the development process.