Forum Discussion
Using Continue to require correct answer on Knowledge Check.
- 12 days ago
Hello everyone, 🎉
I'm happy to let you know we released a new update for Rise 360, adding the new feature below:
- Knowledge check blocks can be added directly to question banks, have their content width and answer colors modified, be required for training progress, and have a set number of retries.
There's nothing to install for web apps. New features and fixes are immediately available, though you might need to export your Rise 360 course again.
Let me know if you have any questions about this update!
Yes, I agree with Halyna.
The idea of Rise 360 is that all courses should generally be started in that application and for most courses their entire content will be able to be created in Rise 360. The trouble is, the vast majority of the Articulate user base is designing courses whereby our customers have to evidence their employees have learned something, have passed the content and are compliant/safe/competent/etc. We can't do this if the users can simply disregard the fact they failed a knowledge check.
If the 'Continue' module wasn't developed to ensure understanding, personally I'm not clear on the benefit of adding additional clicks into the UX just so users can access content, or perhaps I'm missing something? Right now, it seems as though every course requiring even the slightest ability to evidence compliance will still need to have Storyline elements built into it.
Was that always the intention when Rise 360 was developed? If so, could that please be made clearer in the Rise 360 marketing (rather than suggesting the 'majority' of courses will only need Rise 360)?
Thanks
James
Hi, James. Quiz lessons in Rise 360 can be set to require a passing score to continue in the course or even to consider the course complete. For compliance or competency, you can track quizzes built in Rise 360.
A knowledge check is a block within a lesson that has additional content. When we say knowledge check, we're referring to that block as a part of the learning portion of the course. The continue block that follows a knowledge check is looking for interaction with the knowledge check, but it isn't evaluating correctness.
Continue blocks are there to pace learners and prevent them from scrolling through a lesson without exploring blocks, like the accordion block and the scenario block where the learner could be missing important information if they don't interact.
Does that distinction help?