Director, Customer Advocacy and Product Evangelism
Get some fresh ideas for engaging ways to teach K-12 learners about science—in this case all about blood—with this example course. It's chock full of fun facts and inviting interactions students can use on their laptops, tablets, or smartphones.
Nice, Trina! Such a great use of so many of Rise’s cool features. I used to work for ARC’s Blood Services, so it was like a platelet-filled walk down memory lane.
Hi Trina,
I really like the way this course has been designed and it shows off many of the features of Rise, are you able to share this course for download.
Hi Saira. Thanks for your kind words! This one is only an example course, as I wanted to use some images that aren't licensed for redistribution. Sorry, I can't help you out this time, but hopefully, I've given you some ideas you can use.
Trina, I really liked the interaction you used. The quiz interactions in particular were great. I like that when you placed the "card" on the wrong answer (in Myth or Fact), the card rattled instead of getting a more negative response. Well done!
This was very interesting and kept me on my toes! I loved how the course was broken up into sections and how you changed the background so it wasn't all white.
Very impressive layout and graphics. Enjoyed your course. In the part where you: "Click on the donor blood below to see who can receive each blood type". Was that made in storyline 360 and then imported into Rise? I am guessing this is the case, or ??
Thanks for sharing this very nice example! Question : How the webpart "Click on the donor blood below…" was done ? As far as I know, this feature is not available in rise --> Is it done with storyline ? Thanks in advanced for your feedback !
I always love your work, Trina! Being a new Articulate user, I get a lot of inspiration from how you creatively use the tools. Thanks for another great example!
Great use of the tool. It was nice to see the use of gifs besides the traditional photo and video people usually insert into Rise. I also liked the interactive file showing which blood types could be used by whom. Liked the infusion of humor here too, i.e. "goo" - great for the target audience and a reminder that even a topic like this doesn't need to be handled in a stiff fashion.
Hi all, does anyone know how Trina is getting her course to open directly in Lesson 1 as opposed to the Start menu in Rise?
If seen this before in the examples shared, but don't know how this is being done. My search, only turned up this thread which suggests its not possible / easy?
https://community.articulate.com/discussions/rise-360/bypass-start-here-and-go-straight-into-course
Thanks Christine
Hi Christine. I think I can help out here. This example project is hosted on a web server. When you publish a Rise 360 project for the web (or when you’re using the Share link in Rise 360) each lesson has a unique URL. That makes it possible to link straight to a specific lesson rather than hitting the start screen.
This doesn't apply for content sitting on an LMS.
I hope that helps to answer your question!
Hi Trina, That's perfect thanks. Good to know how. I will keep it in mind in case I have a use-case with a 'for the web' scenario.
Much appreciated. Ta Christine
I see this was a asked a few times, but I can't imagine the Blood Bag and Recipient interaction could have been created in anything but Storyline. @Trina is this correct?
Thanks!
You're right, Michelle. There isn't a feature in Rise 360 that would allow you to create a custom interaction like this, so I used the Storyline block. Thanks for chiming in!
Hi Trina, this is very engaging and looks great. I would like to replicate for a different science related topic at our pharma site. I know I can’t download but is all of this standard functionality on Rise? (besides the donor/recipient interaction which comes from Storyline).
Great visual flow. Two questions 1) How did you create the "info" boxes - outlined in purple. Are these inserted as an image? Or is there a "info box" option in Rise I don't know about? 2) Clicking on markers on test tube to learn more about components of blood - is there a "Markers or hot spots" feature in Rise? Or was this created in Storyline? Thank you!
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