article thumbnail

Resources for Two Recent Presentations

Kapp Notes

The other was for NETWORKS which is an Advanced Technology Education (ATE) National Resource Center funded, in part, by the National Science Foundation. One was part of the eLearning Guild’s Online Forums, I spokeon the topic of Gamification of learning and instruction. Here are the slides from the NETWORKS presentation. Online Games.

Resources 140
article thumbnail

Keeping Up - April's Big Question

eLearning Cyclops

This is in reference the immense and rapidly expanding technology tools. April's Big Question from Learning Circuits is "How to Keep up?" It is tough to stay on top of all the emerging tools. However, being involved in an e-learning community is a big help. For me it is a blog community and following many experts on Twitter.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Will Thalheimer, Subscription Learning: A Fundamentally Different Form of eLearning #LSCon

Learning Visions

Tools that can support spaced learning: www.cameo.net www.mindsetter.com [link] NexLearn''s Simwriter platform (incudes microlearning objects) [link] (an open source tool) More providers here: [link] Of course, good instructional design still counts in subscription learning.

article thumbnail

Top Tools for Developing Simulation Based E-learning Courses – Part 2

CommLab India

SimWriter is a highly interactive, responsive authoring tool used to build branching simulations quickly and easily. In this blog, we’ll take a look at some more Authoring tools that will help you to build effective and efficient software courses, offering learners the opportunity to practice in a low-risk environment.

article thumbnail

e-Clippings (Learning As Art): Reflecting on the e-Learning Guild Annual Gathering

Mark Oehlert

Nexlearn produces a tool called SimWriter which really makes the process of creating branching stories really very simple - that doesnt mean its easy - in fact I think one of the great lessons for people will be how quickly it can get difficult to add all the branches and nuances you want.