Examples of cover slides

Hey I know it’s been a long time since I wrote my last post, but I’ve been very busy the last weeks. A few days ago, I had a little bit of free time, so I decided to work with Storyline, and to create a few slides I could use as covers for my future e-learning modules. Also, on May 19th, the 10th volume of the deluxe edition of Fables, a comics by Bill Willingham, was published (and I’ve waited it a long time). So, I decided to use some Fables illustrations for my covers. Yes, I’m a big fan of Fables. If you don’t know this comics yet, I recommend you to buy the beautiful deluxe edition to discover this great comics, and to play the amazing videogame The Wolf Among Us by TellTale Games, based on Fables universe and characters.

Of course, it’s only for the example. You can replace the pictures but whatever you want…

I hope it will give you some inspiration!

Access the slides

Capture1Capture2 Capture3 Capture4Capture5

How to convert a boring PPT presentation into a rapid learning course

Hey everyone, I know I haven’t posted a lot those last weeks. I’ve been very busy with LMS duties and rapid learning design. So I’d like to share my work on this last part.

I spent a few weeks reviewing the existing training material we currently have in my company, and I found a lot of PPT presentation that was used during induction sessions, or also directly published on our LMS (so the learner only download a PPT and read it on his computer). One of my mission in my company is to ‘revamp’ the existing courses into nice and instructional rapid learning courses.

I’m talking about rapid learning and not e-learning because the courses I worked on are not complex enough to talk about an elaborated and complex e-learning course. Rapid learning is a kind of simple e-learning course, in general shorter than a classic e-learning course (5 to 10 minutes max). This kind of rapid learning course are, in general, ‘awareness’ training (sometimes close to information). Their goal is to present and introduce a topic, and to make you learn the basics of this topic. The more complex content can be included in another e-learning course, a bit longer and more complex, or sometimes in an attendance-based course.

But the difference with a basic PPT presentation is that we use instructional tools and activities to help the learner understand and remember the content. When you read a PPT presentation, in general it’s boring and you don’t remember the content a lot… in my opinion, PPT presentations can be good to provide information, but not to make you learn something.

In my rapid learning courses, I use:
a voice, for people who remember better what they hear than what they see
texts and pictures, for people who have a visual memory
animations to make text and pictures appear step by step (following the voice), to ensure even the ‘boring’ slides (i.e. without interaction) are captivating a minimum level of attention
quizzes, to make you think about the content – not to evaluate you, but to force you to think about the question, and try to guess the answer, depending on your current knowledge or good sense
activities like ‘complete the definition with the correct words’: same purpose than the quizzes
interactive slides where you have to click buttons or pictures to reveal more information before being able to continue in the course, so the learners don’t stay ‘passive’ in front of the screen

So, I will share a few slides I created with Storyline for a few courses. The slides are cut to keep only the content part, I removed all the ‘template’ part because its our internal template, and I also precise that I only show content about a legal topic (i.e. applicable for all US companies), so nothing confidential about our core business, of course.

An example with a course about the HIPAA law (which regulates the protected health information in the US):

Before: a single slide with a definition.

Capture1

After: a very simple activity where you have to complete the definition yourself. Here, you have to drag and drop the key words of the definition in the proper blank. Ad you can see, it’s absolutely not hard, and you even can guess the answer with the size of the labels and of the blanks. It’s OK: I just want the learner to spend a moment thinking, and not only reading.

Another slide with the correct sentence also appears just after the activity, to ensure everyone have the correct information + a voice to read the definition.

Capture2

Before: a simple slide with basic information.

Capture3

After: no more content, but instead of giving the information, I ask it in a question. Of course, the correct answer is given to everyone just after.

Capture4

Before: a slide with the list of penalties you risk if you don’t follow the law.

Capture5

After: same content, but with a ‘match’ quiz + the correct answer is given to everyone in the next slide.

Capture6

Before: 3 basic slides to detail what is ‘Protected Health Information’ topic by topic.

Capture7

After: only one slide with cards you have to click to reveal the details. Very simple to create with triggers which change the states of 3 first shapes (the one you click disappear) + triggers which change the state of 3 new shapes that appear when you click the previous ones + an animation when they appear, so it looks like we turn the cards.

Capture8

Capture9

So, as you can see, it is very basic activities very simple to set in Storyline 2. It’s not complex, the graphic aspect is very limited, but for a very simple topic like introducing the HIPAA law to new HR people and new managers of your company, in my opinion it is enough, and it’s already much better than a PPT presentation! When I arrived in the US to work for my company, I remember my manager registered me to the HIPAA course. It was only the PPT version, and I remember I read it in a few minutes and that’s it. I’m sure I would have enjoyed having a rapid learning course with short quizzes, activities, and a voice to help me remember the content, and especially, to help me not sleep in front of my screen 🙂

E-learning Heroes Challenge #55

Hey!

I did not have a lot of time to work on the ELH Challenges last week. As you know, I’m also working in HRIS, not only e-learning. So, I spent the last week working on the Learning Management System of my company. But today, I found time to finish my participation to the ELH Challenge #55! Finally!

This challenge is: how to survive to a zombie apocalypse? Here is my stupid funny answer: just catch them all! And fight other zombies with your own zombie. This is s how I decided to create ‘Pokézomb’, a parody of Pokémon and zombies. I like Pokémon (I spent so much time on this game when I was a kid!) and I like zombies: perfect match!

The idea was to imitate an old Game Boy with the first versions of Pokémon (blue & red). I designed the player to look like a Game Boy, and I added buttons A, B, START, etc. So, there are no colors in this game! I only created the starting scene of the original game, and customized it with zombies. I had to adapt it to make it easier to design in Storyline, so don’t blame me if you notice some parts of the starting scene are missing: I know it. I also had no idea for the names of my Pokézomb, so please forgive my lack of originality.

When you are in the game, use the button A to read the text or continue.

If you notice any mistake (wrong text or image, wrong link…), please let me know. I spent a lot of time on this challenge, and it was not easy, so I may have missed a mistake even if I reviewed the game several times before publishing it.

Click here to play!

zombies