elc
5 TopicsFoodie Frenzy - Choose your Chef
Hi everyone! My name is Ekaterina. Some of you may remember me from my previous account (Ekaterina_V), where I shared several of my projects and participated in the challenges. Since then, I was laid off from my position as an e-learning developer, and unfortunately, I lost access to my corporate Articulate 360 account. However, I'm still very enthusiastic about e-learning and Articulate, so here I am again—this time from my personal account. For this week's challenge, I'd like to share one of my older projects (hopefully that's allowed—I couldn't find anything in the rules that says otherwise!). It's a Jeopardy-style game about food, that uses variables to let learners choose their NPC chef character at the beginning of the game. Based on their selection, they receive personalized feedback throughout the course, including different character portraits and voiceovers. Once the game is completed, learners can restart it and choose a different chef to experience an alternative version of the feedback. Here are a few screenshots from the Gameplay (for this instance, I chose Chef Mike): Foodie FrenzyCould You Pass the 1912 Exam?
The examining board is waiting. In 1912, Bullitt County students gathered at the courthouse once or twice a year to sit the Common Examination. The local newspaper urged even seventh graders to start preparing early. It was a big deal. For Challenge #549, I didn't redesign the exam. I stepped into it. It starts by asking for your Christian name. Not your name. Your Christian name, because that is what a 1912 Kentucky schoolmaster would have said. That one detail sets the tone for everything that follows. The examiner knows your name and isn't shy about using it. The margin notes are handwritten and pointed. The feedback is sarcastic, whether you are right or wrong. Your result arrives as the front page of the Bullitt County Gazette. Personalised headline, rubber stamp verdict, and Superintendent O. Harned's wax seal. If you score zero, the editors note they have done what they can. Go on then. Submit for marking.Accordion FAQs
What if an accordion FAQ didn't have to look like one? For this week's challenge, I built two completely different takes. One is styled as sticky notes pinned on a corkboard, where each note peels open on click, and one is a chat conversation where tapping a question triggers a typing animation before the bot replies. Both in Storyline 360 on a 9:16 canvas, with a selection screen so you can pick which style to explore. Check it out here! Would love to connect on LinkedIn and exchange ideas!Using Accordion Interactions in eLearning
We created a custom eLearning sample on Cybersecurity Compliance to demonstrate how accordion interactions can make learning activities more engaging and learner-friendly. Check out the sample: https://www.swiftelearningservices.com/accordion-interactions-in-custom-elearning/