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VivekSuryavansh's avatar
VivekSuryavansh
Community Member
2 years ago

Separate Triggers for "Previous Slide" and "Back Slide" much needed!

It been a decade but I still have seen developers are spending their time just for manually assign a Jump trigger to "Back Slide number wise"  e.g. page 7 to 6,  5 to 4 and so on.

As we know Storyline only provides jump to "Previous Slide" which takes learner to earlier visited slide! If learner uses Menu list then this "Previous Slide" feature creates issue. 

In many courses there is a requirement of jump to "Back Slide number wise". Developers are putting extra efforts to assign specific back slide so that learner can go backwards. This is very crucial when there are more that 20-30-60 or even more slides.

I'm surprised that not a single developer has raised this feature so far.  

  • A LOT of developers have raised this issue. But even more of them are rethinking the whole concept of e-learning. Page 7 to 6 is a valid idea if you are thinking of a book, viewing a slide show, or traveling in a car. When you go down the highway, there is a physical next and previous town, and you have to go through one to get to the next (just like reading a book or viewing slides, [the electronic equivalent of pages]). If you are traveling by airplane, once you get in the air, you don’t have to go to any specific town. You are free to go wherever you want (just like navigating e-learning). The idea of a slide (that the learner hasn't visited) that should come before this slide is more suited to the concept of a book than to e-learning.

    That said, I know there are certain customers that don’t get the concept of the freedom of navigation e-learning gives us. They are mostly government agencies, or hide-bound big businesses that think because they are very knowledgeable about their product, that makes them knowledgeable about learning. If you are working for one of them, you may be bound by their idea that learning comes from going through a book page by page. In that case, go ahead and create a page-turner.

    Whether you are creating a book or e-learning, menus should be created by sections and concepts, not pages (or slides). I know that there are certain concepts that have to be tied together, and covered in a specific sequence. In that case, even if they are spread out over several slides (which is better than cramming everything onto one slide), there should be only one menu option.  Within those sections, a small sectional menu may make more sense than one menu that has everything in it.

    Perhaps CCAF is the best model. If so, those sections best represent the destinations of menu options.

    I say all this to express the idea that we can expand the concept of how material can be presented with e-learning.