Thanks Tracy... I did create a similar example just now, but how to I get it to react as a true quiz questions where the result is submitted and recorded?
Sorry, re-read that and you wanted to change it to a quiz question. So I took mine and changed it to a pick many (because I had 2 dials).
Next, on the outside area of the slide I added 2 check boxes (one for each dial). I added triggers for each of these. If the dial is set to to the correct answer then change the state of the check box to Selected.
I set the Form View of the slide now to have each of these check boxes must be Selected to be correct.
Another trigger, to submit the interaction when the user checks their answer. (I might with more time, slow this submit down so they see the correct answer and then click next).
Now it functions as a quiz question and can be scored/tracked.
Try a free form question... use single answer with 2 radio buttons. The trigger is when the dial equals a particular value, radio 1 is selected. If the dial is another value, radio 2 is selected. Just have to decide which radio button is a correct answer. Hide the radio buttons off stage. Hope that helps...I've that that a lot.
You have to set a trigger to tell the radio button to select. You must also on the form view assign radio 1 or 2 as the correct answer and the other as a wrong answer.
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Here's one example. I recently created one to mimic a dial the learner needs to set in their work environment on an oxygen unit.
First slide tells them the specifics of what they need to do. Second was to see if they absorbed that information.
http://bit.ly/oxygendial
Thanks Tracy... I did create a similar example just now, but how to I get it to react as a true quiz questions where the result is submitted and recorded?
Sorry, re-read that and you wanted to change it to a quiz question. So I took mine and changed it to a pick many (because I had 2 dials).
Next, on the outside area of the slide I added 2 check boxes (one for each dial). I added triggers for each of these. If the dial is set to to the correct answer then change the state of the check box to Selected.
I set the Form View of the slide now to have each of these check boxes must be Selected to be correct.
Another trigger, to submit the interaction when the user checks their answer. (I might with more time, slow this submit down so they see the correct answer and then click next).
Now it functions as a quiz question and can be scored/tracked.
Wonderful Tracy... you're awesome! thanks for the insight.
Can i do it with a range? The correct answer is the dial being placed in a range of 16 to 18.
Yes, my first dial is a range and the second dial is an exact number.
I had to play with it a bit to get them to look correct. So the real answer for dial one is between 21-30%, as far as the learner sees.
What is in the background is the dial set with a range from 0-15 (I think) it was the way I had to rotate the dial that skewed this in my example.
I finally got it. The radio buttons were the key. Thanks again Tracy!
Thanks for popping in to help here, Tracy! You're earning that Superhero status everyday. 😁
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Try a free form question... use single answer with 2 radio buttons. The trigger is when the dial equals a particular value, radio 1 is selected. If the dial is another value, radio 2 is selected. Just have to decide which radio button is a correct answer. Hide the radio buttons off stage. Hope that helps...I've that that a lot.
This post was removed by the author
You have to set a trigger to tell the radio button to select. You must also on the form view assign radio 1 or 2 as the correct answer and the other as a wrong answer.
Ahhhh, I got it to work! Thank you so much Terry!
List of triggers here for posterity.
Glad to help Adrienne. I've gotten tons of help here so I am happy to give back when I can.
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