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Training with Branching Scenarios

Experiencing eLearning

How do you use branching scenarios in instructor-led training, rather than self-paced elearning? For example, you can use branching scenarios in training as a full group with discussion or polls, in small groups, or outside of class as a discussion prompt. Another option is to use polls to ask your audience what choice to select.

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TEACHING ONLINE CLASSES: Interactive Polls Help End Sucky Training

The Logical Blog by IconLogic

  One of the easiest ways to engage online students is by displaying quizzes and polls. When I start my classes, displaying a poll is a great way to break the ice and get my class started on the right foot.   Most virtual training platforms (GoToTraining, WebEx, Connect, etc) allow you to create polls within the tool.

Poll 179
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PowerPoint: Another Polling Tool, Poll Everywhere

The Logical Blog by IconLogic

by AJ George  I've previously written about Shakespeak , a tool that allows presenters to collect and display responses to open-ended and multiple choice questions via text, web, and Twitter.  I decided to give Poll Everywhere a try. Poll Everywhere is free at an introductory level.   .

Poll 178
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My Top Blog Posts of 2022

Experiencing eLearning

My Top 10 Tools for Learning 2022 : These are my top 10 tools for learning in 2022, both professionally creating learning for others and personally for my own learning. Training with Branching Scenarios : You can do live, instructor-led training with branching scenarios using full group discussions, polls, small groups, or assignments.

Blogging 473
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Global Poll Reveals Key Trends in e-Learning Design

Vikas Joshi on Interactive Learning

In a recent online event, we polled hundreds of course designers spread throughout Australia, Europe and USA with four simple questions. In your experience, over the past several years, are customer budgets per hour of eLearning increasing, decreasing or remaining about the same? The results are quite interesting. Question 1.

Poll 213
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Should Learning Designers Learn to Code? [Poll]

mLearning Revolution

There are many people in Instructional Design, who may dismiss coding altogether with the argument that we have excellent WYSIWYG (what you see is what you get) rapid eLearning tools that do a great job at developing learning with little to no coding necessary and that are mostly based on the ubiquity of PowerPoint. What do you think?

Poll 185
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UX, Accessibility, & More: ID Links 5/24/22

Experiencing eLearning

This post includes links on UX, accessibility, branching scenarios, Twine, instructional design blogs, free/freemium tools, and systems thinking. 7 Articles To Help You Improve Your eLearning Designs. A curated list of UX resources from Mel Milloway with relevance for elearning development. Free and freemium tools.