I was wondering if anyone has ever managed to stop that SCORM continue where you left off message from popping up. I need to make a test that ALWAYS continues where it left off. We have an issue with students not liking the questions they were dealt and clicking NO to get a new pool.
I know there is no way to do it in the program, but maybe a flash file with some JavaScript command in it to answer yes automatically?
I haven't seen a way within Quizmaker to always resume, and looked at some previous threads to see if I could find any other solutions, but no luck. You mentioned Javascript, and we do have a number of community members who are well versed in Javascript, so I hope that they'll chime in here to help you out.
The community has been helpful in the past. I know for example, I have been able to hide the Review button with a flash object that hides it once the page loads. I was hoping that the same thing can be applied to just auto answer yes or hide the no button.
The review button is a bit easier to hide as it's on the slide itself, whereas the Resume functionality is not. Hmm, I'll definitely keep my eyes peeled - but you may have more luck attracting the Javascript gurus if you post it again and place Javascript in the title.
Although, what about updating the text on the Resume button - change what it says to direct your user to always answer yes. Maybe a bit of trickery?
3 Replies
Hi Lazaro and welcome to Heroes!
I haven't seen a way within Quizmaker to always resume, and looked at some previous threads to see if I could find any other solutions, but no luck. You mentioned Javascript, and we do have a number of community members who are well versed in Javascript, so I hope that they'll chime in here to help you out.
Thanks,
The community has been helpful in the past. I know for example, I have been able to hide the Review button with a flash object that hides it once the page loads. I was hoping that the same thing can be applied to just auto answer yes or hide the no button.
The review button is a bit easier to hide as it's on the slide itself, whereas the Resume functionality is not. Hmm, I'll definitely keep my eyes peeled - but you may have more luck attracting the Javascript gurus if you post it again and place Javascript in the title.
Although, what about updating the text on the Resume button - change what it says to direct your user to always answer yes. Maybe a bit of trickery?
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