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Jackie Van Nice

E-Learning Goodness by Jackie Van Nice

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German

Podcast: A One-Sided E-Learning Interview

June 24, 2014 By Jackie Van Nice 13 Comments

Image Credit: David Anderson

Image Credit: David Anderson

This week, Articulate’s intrepid David Anderson came up with yet another remarkable e-learning challenge: Create your own podcast. He supplied the questions and we got to make it happen. Here’s mine, and I explain how I did it at the end of this post. If you’d rather autoplay all tracks (rather than click on each one) you can listen to them here.

1. Tell us a little about yourself and the types of e-learning projects you most enjoy.

2. How did you become an e-learning or instructional designer?

3. What are the essentials of good e-learning design?

4. Tell me about your most successful e-learning project.

5. What are the most important criteria in evaluating e-learning?

6. What are some common mistakes new course designers make and how can they avoid them?

7. How is designing mobile learning different than designing for the desktop?

8. How do you evaluate whether your course was effective?

9. How do you keep up your skills and stay current in the industry?

10. What is the future of e-learning?

The Process

There are countless ways to do this, but this is what I did:

  1. Jotted down my first response to each question, treating it as though someone had asked me in conversation. The upside is it’s how I’d really answer a first question. The downside is there are no normal conversational follow-up questions, so I don’t get into any detail.
  2. Used my trusty Audio-Technica AT2020 desktop USB mic to record in Garage Band on iMac (just for fun), referring to my jotted-down answers as a guide. How many takes? Probably a couple for each one. If you’d like to see a photo of my setup, along with some of my favorite recording tips, they’re right here.
  3. Exported individual tracks as mp3s, then imported them into Audacity on PC to edit. Used the noise removal effect to get rid of background hum.
  4. Headed over to SoundCloud where I started a free account.and uploaded the mp3s. Thanks to Tim Slade for thinking of SoundCloud!
  5. Headed here to my WordPress blog to write this up. To embed these tracks I referred to SoundCloud’s instructions which worked quite nicely; though rather than doing a link-type post I simply pasted each of the track links into the body of a standard post.

Update!

David has collected everyone’s podcasts in one place for easy browsing and enjoying. Well worth a listen. (Great job, David!)

Filed Under: E-Learning Tagged With: Audio, Community, E-Learning Design, ELHChallenge, Freelancing, German, Professional Development, Voiceover

Video: How to Customize This Sobered-Up Drinking Game

June 6, 2014 By Jackie Van Nice 4 Comments

I’ve just taken my original German drinking game created in Articulate Storyline and made it into a free template that I talked about recently.  Now I’ve recorded two videos to help you use the template. You can download the free Storyline template here, and I also made a PowerPoint version you can download here.

Video #1: Original vs. the Template

In this video I walk you through the features of the original game, then compare them to the template. Kind of a nice overview. If you’d prefer to see captures of the screens compared, they’re at the end of this post. I created this for the Storyline version, but PowerPoint users can get some useful information from it, too.

Video Player
http://www.jackievannice.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/screencast1.mp4

Media error: Format(s) not supported or source(s) not found

Download File: http://www.jackievannice.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/screencast1.mp4?_=1
00:00
00:00
00:00
Use Up/Down Arrow keys to increase or decrease volume.

 Video #2: How to Customize the Storyline Template

In this video I show you the customizable features you can make your own. Again, I created it for the Storyline version, but PowerPoint users can get some useful information from it, too.

Video Player
http://www.jackievannice.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/screencast2.mp4

Media error: Format(s) not supported or source(s) not found

Download File: http://www.jackievannice.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/screencast2.mp4?_=2
00:00
00:00
00:00
Use Up/Down Arrow keys to increase or decrease volume.

Have Fun!

I hope these walk-throughs help as you go forth to create your own games. Enjoy!

Filed Under: E-Learning Tagged With: Articulate Storyline, Characters, Community, E-Learning Design, ELHChallenge, Free Download, Games, German, Instructional Design, Languages, PowerPoint, Show Your Work, Templates, Video

Free to Good Home: Playful Game Template

May 27, 2014 By Jackie Van Nice 4 Comments

Select Image to Launch Original Game

Select Image to Launch Original Game

Select Image to Launch Template Demo

Select Image to Launch Template Demo

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The Source File Dilemma

People seemed to really like this German drinking game I created for an Articulate challenge a while back. I got requests for the source file but didn’t want to violate license agreements by handing it out with assets intact, and also didn’t want to hand out a stripped file that wasn’t fully functional.

The Happy Result & Lots of Free Games

Last week, still getting requests for the file, I finally took time to rework it so it was clean, easy to customize, and something I could offer as a free download. I wanted to maintain a sense of style and all of the functionality while still leaving it wide open to customize, and I’m pretty happy with the result.

By complete serendipity, David Anderson featured 10 free Storyline e-learning game templates on the Articulate site this week and was able to include mine as one of them. There’s a good chance that any or all of these games will get your creative juices flowing, and you can get all of them right here!

2 Free Templates:  Storyline & PowerPoint!

Here’s the download page for the Storyline template, and since people without Storyline wanted to use it, too – I created a PowerPoint version you can download, too!

Videos to Help You Customize

I made a couple of videos to show you a feature comparison and the customization points you’ll want to hit. You can see them here.

Screen Captures Compared

I also created side-by-side screen captures, seen below, to help you see the original next to the template. Click on any image to see it larger.

Introduction

Introduction

Game Start

Game Start

Game Board

Game Board

Progress Meter

Progress Meter

Challenge Question

Challenge Question

Feedback When Correct

Feedback When Correct

Feedback When Incorrect

Feedback When Incorrect

The Joy of Success

The Joy of Success

Let Me Know!

If you have ideas for how you could use this template – or if you’ve already used it! – I hope you’ll let me know. I’d love to hear what you did or would like to do. You can leave a comment below. And have fun!

Filed Under: E-Learning Tagged With: Articulate Storyline, Characters, Community, E-Learning Design, ELHChallenge, Free Download, Games, German, Instructional Design, Languages, PowerPoint, Show Your Work, Templates

How Did You Become an Instructional Designer?

May 16, 2014 By Jackie Van Nice 2 Comments

The Tweeted Taunt

The Tweeted Taunt

The fine folks over at ttc Innovations were inspired by Cammy Bean‘s The Accidental Instructional Designer to ask me (and all other IDs) how I (we all) got here. History proves I can be goaded and challenged into any number of things (note my extensive Articulate Challenges activity) – and this Twitter tactic worked perfectly.

Just One Problem

The only thing is I don’t have a great “accidental” story. The only accident was when I discovered, after taking a whole lot of college German because I loved it, that the only way to continue that particular romp in the park was to get a grad degree, and that involved teaching German if I wanted the university to pay for it.

Instructional Design as a Survival Tactic

After playing through the terror in my head – (“I’m not a public speaker!” “My colleagues are native speakers of German!” “I’ve never taught anything and I’m starting by teaching real classes that real students really pay for at a real university?!”) – I just did it.

Four things ended up making me incredibly successful:

  1. The terror. My response was to be the best-prepared human who could walk into that classroom. I’d spend 4 to 6 hours every night – 5 days a week – designing the next day’s lesson, using methods nearly identical to what I now use to create e-learning.
  2. The University of Oregon’s wise move to require classes on instructional education before allowing just any fool to start teaching their classes. This was my intro to instructional design and I loved it.
  3. An outstanding and extremely forward-thinking textbook. It provided a good framework for teaching the specifics of the language, but the real focus was on creating a fantastic environment for endless creativity and real practice.
  4. My adoration of the topic. I’d just returned from a year of grad school at the Universität Konstanz in Germany and my enthusiasm for learning German, traveling, and being an exchange student was literally inescapable.

I didn’t realize how well classes were going until the students coming in for the class after mine began stopping me to ask what the heck I was doing in there. All they could hear were rounds of intense group concentration, roars of laughter, and sustained cheers and applause (for their peers!) – followed by happy chatty people exiting at the end. I guess that wasn’t what the class after mine was like. Crazily, I never even heard all of that because I was so intensely in the moment of what we were doing. It was awesome.

Then There Was More Stuff

After that there was more education and more teaching and lots of other stuff (it would take at least 20 blog posts to get through it all), but in the end I decided I just wanted to be an independent ID, which is what I wrote about here.

Share Your Story, Too!

I hope that’s what ttc Innovations had in mind when they took to Twitter to call me out. I suggest you play along too! Share your story by visiting their blog and/or blogging then tweeting using the hashtag #MyIDStory – and have fun!

Filed Under: Working for Yourself Tagged With: Freelancing, German, Instructional Design, Languages, Professional Development

The Stuff That Résumés Are Made Of

April 22, 2014 By Jackie Van Nice 10 Comments

Select Image to Launch Demo

Select Image to Launch Demo

I’d recently been admiring some examples of graphic résumés, but couldn’t imagine how I could ever do one. Turns out Articulate’s resident nudger, David Anderson, keeps an eye out for that sort of thing and his challenge this week is to come up with an interactive résumé or portfolio. So time for me to figure it out.

I haven’t had much call for a résumé since I’ve been independent, but creating an interactive graphic where I could play with the idea of a résumé sounded like fun, so off I went.

Inspiration

My friend and talented freelance e-learning designer Donna Carson gave me edits for a bio I submitted with my DevLearn speaking proposals on Friday. The phrases she used made me want to both laugh and go conquer the world at the same time. Her description of my “fearless flair” in designing training inspired me to come up with “Fearless Designs!” “Bold Voiceovers!” and “Daring Development!” to describe what I do. For graphic inspiration I turned to old movie posters. They had the expressive graphics and cool details I wanted, plus they could handle the dramatic phrases I had in mind.

My Graphic Inspiration

My Graphic Inspiration

Design

Graphics: To start, I pinned old movie posters I liked and chose a color scheme that resonated with me. You can clearly see I used the colors and rough layout of the Charlie Chan at the Wax Museum poster. For text callouts and credits I used elements based on other posters including The Beast From 20,000 Fathoms.

Theme: I chose a detective theme because I was drawn to the idea of Humphrey Bogart’s Sam Spade. He’s on the right side of the law, but still seems a little shady. (His line that the Maltese Falcon is “the stuff that dreams are made of” inspired this post’s title.)

More Graphic Inspiration

More Graphic Inspiration

The Theater: I wanted an entry screen so that, once clicked, the user’s full attention is on the initial visuals, music, and animation when they hit the main screen – and having them click a ticket to get inside made sense.

The way the overall flow works is based on the little theater I practically lived at as an undergrad at Humboldt State University in Arcata, California. The Minor, off the little town square, was an old art house movie theater that changed its double or triple features at least three times a week. I spent a few thousand of the happiest hours I’ve ever spent in my life there, and got to see a gabillion classic movies like the ones that inspired this piece.

The Minor Theater

The Minor Theater

When it was cold out, you’d come off the street through a thick red curtain, get popcorn and admire the old movie posters in the lobby, then go through another red curtain to enter the theater. So I was seeing my résumé as one of those old posters in the lobby.

Audio: I wanted to bring it to life with sound. There are effects for audience buzz, curtains being pulled aside, cheers, applause, police whistles, sirens, screams, breaking glass, etc., but I wanted a theme song. The whole time I was working on this I kept hearing a driving theme somewhere between Peter Gunn and James Bond. Lucky for me I’ve got an “in” with talented songwriter, musician, and freelance e-learning guy Dan Sweigert who was able to write and produce the theme song in no time flat.

Content

EducationRésumé Elements: I kept it simple and included my (boldly-phrased) skill set, education, experience, and the main software I use. The sections for education and experience were by far the biggest creative challenges, but in the end I was happy to find a quick way to blow through them that still maintains the tone and theme.

Brevity: I find it endlessly entertaining that each of the links from the main screen shows just one screen of content (at best) that makes the audience go wild. I wanted to get in, show a glimpse of just a morsel of my work, and get out.

See It In Action!

Enjoy the vintage-inspired goodness right here.

Filed Under: E-Learning Tagged With: Articulate Storyline, Audio, Characters, Community, E-Learning Design, ELHChallenge, Emotional Engagement, German, Instructional Design, Portfolio, Professional Development, Typography, Video, Visual Design

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Welcome!

I’m an award-winning instructional designer and proud Articulate Super Hero who creates e-learning for large organizations. I blog to explain my design process, share tips and tricks, and help others succeed. I hope you enjoy my refreshing gallery of e-learning goodness!

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