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Using Text-to-Speech in an eLearning Course

Tony Karrer

This is third post in a series on Text-to-Speech for eLearning written by Dr. Joel Harband and edited by me (which turns out to be a great way to learn). In this post we will begin to address the practical side of the subject: How can e-learning developers use Text-to-Speech (TTS) voices to narrate their courses?

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Friday Finds — Learning Science, Expert Generalists, Our Knowingness Problem

Mike Taylor

We have become obsessed with efficiency and productivity, leading us to prioritize speed over depth of knowledge. By embracing a humble mindset that acknowledges the limits of our knowledge, we can foster more meaningful and productive conversations and make progress towards a better future. ( link] play.ht

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PowerPoint to Captivate Process Overview

Adobe Captivate

Add with note, generate Text to Speech audio. Publish to Production LMS. Verify course title, assign to target audience, and launch into production LMS. Following the recording session, segments of audio are exported from Audition as WAV files with the slide number in the filename. Production Launch.

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Adobe eLearning Suite CS4

Big Dog, Little Dog

The new Captivate CS4 contains several new features, notably customizable widgets, project templates, and text-to-speech. So I saved it to a WAV file, which was quite large, and then saved that as an MP3 file which worked quite well -- a small compact file plus it kept both tracks.

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