Forum Discussion
Extracting Quiz Questions & Answers
Hi ElyseGentile,
this is how I would do this:
There is indeed no official way, but AI can help with this (it is still not a one-click-solution but for many questions or at my typing speed, still faster than retyping all questions):
- Open the quiz and take screenshots of the quiz questions you need, copy them into Word (or whatever you are using) and create a pdf.
- Use an AI Chatbot you are allowed to use for this content and prompt it to read the text in the images of the pdf and put the questions and answers into a Word-file (or text file or show them in the chat window, whatever).
- Check the Questions and add which answers are the correct ones in the text/Word file so you don't import mistakes afterwards
- Here you find many tipps how to import questions into SL, including an Excel template (you need this!): Search | E-Learning Heroes , or here (1st result of this search) https://www.articulatesupport.com/article/Storyline-360-Importing-Questions-from-Excel-Spreadsheets-and-Text-Files#excel
- Prompt your AI chatbot to create an Excel sheet with your questions according to the template you find in the links.
- Check the Excel file and if OK, import into a new Storyline project.
Worked for me, May not work in first attempt, improve your prompt in the same chat. AI learns from mistakes (to an extend).
Good luck!
- Silverfire19 days agoCommunity Member
If you do it this way, you are giving your IP to an AI company. That carries with it risks and compromises you may not be comfortable with (for instance, Claude acts as a data vaccum cleaner when installed locally, etc).
The method is sound, though. You can use existing OCR tools for this purpose. They range from decent (GImageReader, free), to quite good (Abby FineReader, paid).
- FelixFranke19 days agoCommunity Member
Hi Silverfire,
you are right, which is why I said to "Use an AI Chatbot you are allowed to use for this content" (admitteldy it's a bit hidden in my longish text).
In our case for example, we have the company version of Copilot, which lets us act in a "protected environment".
I am allowed to use it for internal (not "confidential") information, but I cannot use Claude or ChatGPT for this. Generally, all free versions of AI suck up all data they can get becuse they literally feed on it.
I have the luxury to work in an enterprise environment, which rids me of some decisions which I would have to take for myself as a freelancer.
So good point from your side. 👍🏼