Forum Discussion

SilVernon's avatar
2 months ago

Looking for examples of Source Material & Course Outlines/Storyboards

 

Hi there! The Articulate product team is looking to better understand how you use source materials and outlines/storyboards to create courses.

In order to do so, we need real world examples of these! We are looking to collect samples of those source materials, outlines, and the final course to have "real world" examples.

For this form, choose a recent example of a course you've created and provide us with:

  • Source Material(s) (if applicable),
  • Outline/Storyboard (if applicable)
  • Final Course 

Please feel free to fill this out multiple times as we know each user likely has many examples of their work!

Submit your examples HERE 

If you have any issues, or would prefer to email these examples please contact Sil Vernon (svernon@articulate.com).

  • ghostchicken's avatar
    ghostchicken
    Community Member

    I'm just looking for an output (including selectable text captions, not just embedded in the thumbnail image) that exports/publishes to Word in a standard 2 column format with images/text captions on the left and Script/Audio in the right (could be Slide notes, if it had to be...)  Any ideas?

  • naps2's avatar
    naps2
    Community Member

    You can find examples of source materials, course outlines, and storyboards in educational repositories, university websites, or online course platforms. Sites like Coursera, edX, and OpenCourseWare often provide structured outlines for reference.

  • David0384's avatar
    David0384
    Community Member

    It's great to see the Articulate team gathering real-world examples to enhance course creation insights! Providing source materials, outlines, and final courses will help refine best practices and improve the platform’s usability. This initiative encourages collaboration and learning from real instructional design workflows. Users sharing multiple examples will give a broader perspective on different approaches. Looking forward to seeing how this research helps improve future course development tools!