Remove Alternatives Remove Embed Remove Movie Remove Quiz
article thumbnail

Free L&D webinars for February 2021

Limestone Learning

PT: Hollywood FX with PowerPoint Make professional, movie quality effects using PowerPoint. PT: Articulate Storyline: Using Convert to Freeform to Create Custom Quiz Templates Assessing a learner’s knowledge in a course is a common design practice. Adding quiz questions in Storyline is easy with its included template library.

Free 131
article thumbnail

Top 74 eLearning Posts from September 2010

eLearning Learning Posts

Free Quiz and Test Maker Tools Plus My Top 3 - eLearning 24-7 , September 14, 2010 While this market has always existed, it is clearly taking a whole new form in two areas: Strong emphasis to embed into a web site or blog. Capabilities to push quiz on Twitter and Facebook. Strap yourself in. that’s right.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

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

article thumbnail

13 eLearning Scenario Tips that 60 Experts Agree On

eLearningArt

Tip: think like a movie script writer. Then introduce some challenges and alternative actions learners can take (solving a problem, helping someone, making a difference). Make it…more like a movie of outcome choices and less like a story problem from grade school! Remember back to the last movie you saw.

Expert 104
article thumbnail

85+ Top Tools & Resources for Course Creators

learnWorlds

With Magisto , you can transform your ordinary videos to amazing and memorable movies that you want to watch again and again using an easy and automated tool. Once you create your movie, you can share it with others online. With EDpuzzle you can change the video content, crop it and easily add quiz questions. Keynote (Apple).

article thumbnail

Adobe shows off Captivate 4 and the Adobe eLearning Suite

Steve Howard

Alternatively the comments can be stored in a shared network location so that comments from every reviewer can be housed in the same location. In his example, RJ showed us how to embed the variable into a caption, using the syntax $$myVar$$ so that instructions to the user could use the recorded name, instead of a non-personal command.

Adobe 40