Great, MA! You can go to Insert > New Slide > Quizzing > Graded > Fill in the blank, and you'll be given the template to set up your question. You can enter up to 10 correct answers per question.
i don t want to set up questions but create a text with blank fields to fill in. i took rapidly for example this grammar exercice where learners have to fill the gaps directly without any indication. my goal is to propose a text with 10 sentences on the same slide.
Angelina Joli is American. isn't French.
Brad Pitt is American, too. isn't German.
Brad and Angelina aren't French. are American.
My friend and I are high school students. aren't primary school students.
The Statue of Liberty is in New York. isn't in Washington.
By default, Storyline does not support evaluating more than one data entry field on a slide. However, you may be able to evaluate multiple fields on the same slide using the method described in this article.
You'd have to test to see if this works with the workaround for having multiple questions on one slide that you're using, but Step 2 of this tutorial covers adding question value. Hope that helps!
10 Replies
Hi MA Ha,
Sorry if I'm misunderstanding, but are you looking for how to build a fill-in-the-blank quiz?
Yes, Peter.
i would like to create a 10 line text and ask the learners to fill in the blank with the right word with right spelling.
Great, MA! You can go to Insert > New Slide > Quizzing > Graded > Fill in the blank, and you'll be given the template to set up your question. You can enter up to 10 correct answers per question.
i don t want to set up questions but create a text with blank fields to fill in. i took rapidly for example this grammar exercice where learners have to fill the gaps directly without any indication. my goal is to propose a text with 10 sentences on the same slide.
sorry but i can notice you cannot see the blanks to fill in. they are located at the beginning of the second sentence.
Hi MA,
By default, Storyline does not support evaluating more than one data entry field on a slide. However, you may be able to evaluate multiple fields on the same slide using the method described in this article.
Peter
this is what i was looking for. now i know the limits.
thank you for your prompt reply and kind support.
MH
Good luck with the project
Peter
i have another request.
i would like to provide a different weight for each question depending on the question's level of difficulty,
how will i get the results ?
rgds
MH
Hi MA,
You'd have to test to see if this works with the workaround for having multiple questions on one slide that you're using, but Step 2 of this tutorial covers adding question value. Hope that helps!
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