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Key Steps to Preparing Great Synchronous Interactions

Experiencing eLearning

“Death by PowerPoint online is worse than Death by PowerPoint in the classroom&# (not an exact quote, but gets the gist of what she said). Breakout rooms–how does audio work? Media file types/players–if you use Quicktime, will everyone in the audience be able to see it? open-ended questions.

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TCC09: Podcasting with Section 508

Experiencing eLearning

AAC (m4a)–audio. Pop filters–you can buy it at any audio supply or use an old screen door and bend it around your mic. From PowerPoint: Save as Pictures. Save to CD, swf, avi, mp3, Quicktime. multitrack audio for Mac. Transcripts can be used if it’s just audio (mp3 or radio). Digital File.

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eLearning 101: How to Make an eLearning Course

OpenSesame

If you’re starting from scratch, you can start with PowerPoint presentations and use these tools to create interactive objects, add audio and export to the SCORM standard. There are also simple free tools to export PowerPoint files to SCORM, including the iSpring plugin and AuthorPoint Lite. Need to edit? Reusable Resources.

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Keeping Up - April's Big Question

eLearning Cyclops

Here are the results and the level of exposure to technology tools this community provides: Twitter (2482) Social Network (1999) Wiki (1610) LMS (1346) Podcaster (1239) Facebook (1176) Flash (980) PowerPoint (922) YouTube (843) RSS (814) LinkedIn (798) Second Life (687) iPhone (602) Director (584) Moodle (550) PDF (521) Captivate (515) Wikipedia (502) (..)

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JOE GANCI – CRYSTAL BALLING WITH LEARNNOVATORS

Learnnovators

I dare say that 75% or more of the eLearning that I have seen in the last few years has been nothing better than slightly warmed over PowerPoint presentations, usually with a quiz attached at the end. Tools fall into three categories: PowerPoint add-in tools, tools you install (outside of PowerPoint) and cloud-based tools.

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Authoring Tool Market – What I am seeing

eLearning 24-7

Audio Editing. Templates have been around for decades and often look like the ones you get with PowerPoint – which are lame. Adding video via YouTube or mp4 or Quicktime or whatever has been in place for a long time. I for one, like that because it has run its course (look a pun!). Another feature on the rise.

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Joe Ganci – Crystal Balling with Learnnovators

Learnnovators

I dare say that 75% or more of the eLearning that I have seen in the last few years has been nothing better than slightly warmed over PowerPoint presentations, usually with a quiz attached at the end. Tools fall into three categories: PowerPoint add-in tools, tools you install (outside of PowerPoint) and cloud-based tools.