Forum Discussion

AliciaAlcaino's avatar
AliciaAlcaino
Community Member
6 years ago

How to track edits in Rise page?

Do you have in your roadmap a feature in how to track edits in Rise pages?

Thanks 

Alicia 

  • I can't express how needed this feature is! Especially when working in dual languages. This would literally cut out HOURS of useless work for each asset. 

    We do the PDF and Word exports but I find a HUGE problem with that type of tracking is that they don't show the answers to check-in, knowledge test questions. This is where a lot of our debrief and 'teaching moments' come in, so they often require updates, etc. 

  • I also would like to request a Track Changes feature, or at least some way to put in Comments that all editors can see.

    I have made a Feature Request. Fingers crossed for a result.

  • BradDameron's avatar
    BradDameron
    Community Member

    I also would like a track change or version history in Rise 360. Loving the app!

    Thank you!

  • LauraSidari's avatar
    LauraSidari
    Community Member

    I've put in a request too. Tracked changes is critical for most corporations, for quality and compliance purposes. We're trying to move with the digial times for training, but without this feature we are stuck. 

  • I also put in a feature request! If I need to show what I've done with stakeholder feedback I currently need to either have two screens open to show and compare different versions, or I need to somehow manually highlight new/changed/removed text and continually make notes when I move something around or change a block or something like that. And then I need to spend time cleaning up all those highlights and notes from the final version before exporting it.

  • I export Rise course to pdf, then convert the pdf to Word. You will have a Word document where reviewers can comment , collaborate, edit and track changes. I suggest to the reviewers to have the Rise view only open to see hierarchy of content but to make all edits in the Word doc. We do not use Articulate Review since edits are not connected to the location so creates extra work and confusion for the reviewer, especially when there are a team of reviewers.

    When you convert from pdf to Word, you can spellcheck as well in Word and fix in Rise. During the conversion some words in the Word doc may become symbols or become mispelled, but just a very few.

    • AngeloCruz's avatar
      AngeloCruz
      Staff

      This is great, Hallie! Thanks for sharing your process.

      I'm sure a lot of our community members will find this information helpful!

  • LizD's avatar
    LizD
    Community Member

    Like others upthread, I maintain a parallel version of the course in Word format. Any changes that take place in Rise are also made in the Word doc, and vice versa. 

    Each Rise deliverable (first draft through final product) has its own Word doc, so they are a matching pair throughout the design/development process. 

    Having the content in Word format makes it much easier to bake in accessibility throughout the process by using Word's formatting and accessibility features to catch and correct issues before the content goes into Rise. That includes making sure the text content is well-structured with headings, which is something that I think gets overlooked when doing "rapid development" where courses are built directly in Rise, vs. using a Word doc as the first step.

    • KarlMuller's avatar
      KarlMuller
      Community Member

      We have been using this exact process for the past five years, and it's well worth the effort.

  • LizD's avatar
    LizD
    Community Member

    For courses that were built directly in Rise, I've experimented with different approaches to extract the text content and create a Word doc. In my experience, exporting to PDF is unwieldly for courses with a lot of interactivity or audio/visual elements. The PDF requires a lot of manual cleanup to remove those elements and to format/style in Word.

    My two approaches are:

    1. Export using Rise's translation-export feature. Still requires cleanup. Sometimes omits text.
    2. Manually copy/paste from Rise into a Word doc. As ridiculous as this sounds, sometimes it is actually less time-consuming and more error-proof than exporting to PDF or to XLIFF.

    I do a lot of course remediation work, and if I could give one piece of advice to folks building Rise courses from scratch, it would be to invest in creating and maintaining parallel Word versions of course content. It pays off big time over the life of a course.