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Jackie Van Nice

E-Learning Goodness by Jackie Van Nice

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Show Your Work: Creating Portfolio Images to Share

August 10, 2014 By Jackie Van Nice 4 Comments

This week’s Articulate challenge is about creating images to showcase your work. After going through the process of producing new work it’s tempting to just move on, but creating shareable images helps build a more visual portfolio and show your peers what you’ve been up to, too.

Main Portfolio Image

First, David Anderson wanted us to create a main portfolio image he could use to link from the challenge to our online portfolios.

Since my website pretty much says it all (who I am, what I do, and what my work looks like), I adapted the basic layout of my site and captures of my work into an image David could use. I also like the idea that anyone clicking on the image will land on exactly what they’d expect to see. Truth in advertising.

Jackie Van Nice Portfolio

Portfolio Image for the Challenge: Look familiar?

Use this free template! I shared the template I used to create this image with another community member, and they found it so useful I thought I’d offer it as a free download. It’s in PowerPoint, and you’re welcome to grab it right here.

Images for Social Media

The next step was to create the same type of image to share on Twitter, Facebook, and Pinterest. Since each handles images differently, the challenge is to try to get your image to display as you’d like it to. The images I shared on those sites are below.

This will be an ongoing challenge. Between the ever-changing demos I create and the ever-changing sites to share them on, this can only be a work in progress. But the value of figuring it out and doing it well is enormous. Thanks for the challenge, David!

Portfolio Image Posted to Facebook

Portfolio Image Posted to Facebook

Portfolio Image Posted to Twitter

Portfolio Image Posted to Twitter

Portfolio Image I Pinned on Pinterest

Portfolio Image I Pinned on Pinterest

Filed Under: Working for Yourself Tagged With: Community, E-Learning Design, ELHChallenge, Free Download, Freelancing, Portfolio, PowerPoint, Professional Development, Show Your Work, Visual Design

My Scenic Route to E-Learning Design (+ Free Storyline Template!)

July 27, 2014 By Jackie Van Nice 12 Comments

Select Image to Launch Demo

Select Image to Launch Demo

This week’s Articulate challenge was to create a virtual tour. Given how varied my journey to e-learning has been, I thought it might make for an interesting tour.

Select Image to Launch Inspiration Demo

Select Image to Launch Inspiration Demo

Design Inspiration

I liked one of David Anderson’s inspiration examples enough to create something similar. It’s a New York Times virtual wine tour of Italy. I appreciated how quick and compact it was while still providing enough information to make for a good tour.

Content

I capped it at 30 jobs, but there were more. At times I worked up to 5 simultaneous part-time jobs in college. Multiply that by a whole lot of quarters and semesters, and we could have been here all day.

Ducks Are Involved

Ducks Are Involved

See the Tour!

If you’d like the tour, take it here.

Get the Free Template!

Grab the Free Template!

Download the Free Storyline Template!

This piece was easier than most to make into a template to give away, so that’s what I did. Grab it on the download page, then have fun making your own tour!

Filed Under: E-Learning Tagged With: Articulate Storyline, Community, E-Learning Design, ELHChallenge, Free Download, Freelancing, German, Languages, Professional Development, Templates

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
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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

At Last! A Drinking Game I Can Win

February 27, 2014 By Jackie Van Nice 10 Comments

At Last! A Drinking Game I Can Win

Select Image to Launch Demo

For this week’s Articulate E-Learning Heroes Challenge, David Anderson dared us to create a simple game. (Oh, it’s on.) I created an Oktoberfest Quest game, wherein our hero drinks his way across Germany in order to reach the hallowed beer tents of Oktoberfest in Munich. Somebody had to do it.

A Triumvirate of Inspiration

Timing: David put out the challenge only hours after I’d participated in the weekly #lrnchat discussion on Twitter. Everyone was terribly serious as they discussed how to work collaboratively in groups – until someone brought up beer as a motivational tool. Well, THAT got them dancing in the Twittery aisles, and the whole evening changed. I don’t drink much, but I made a large mental note of what got them engaged: The mere mention of beer.

Topic: As they say, go with what you know. After collecting entirely too many degrees in German, teaching German, and studying, working, and living in Germany – I thought to myself: “maaaaaybe something German…?”

Potential Game Features: I wanted to focus on designing a game board and some sort of progress meter. Since a map of Germany seemed like a natural game board, and a giant Maßkrug slowly filling with beer seemed like an outstanding progress meter, I decided to try those.

Maßkrug

Maßkrug

Design

Since my primary elements, the map of Germany and the Maßkrug, were better suited to a portrait orientation, I flipped the standard Storyline layout so they could inhabit the full screen.

Once I decided to use the game to teach German dining customs, I put a wooden background underneath the map to evoke the feel of a restaurant table, and the checkered tablecloth behind the Maßkrug for the same reason.

I also knew that sound effects would be critical, especially for filling the Maßkrug. I got lucky and found some evocative ones.

Progress

There are two measures of progress: linear progress on the map, and liquidy beer progress in the Maßkrug.

Linear Progress

Linear Progress

Linear Progress: I thought a little Krug at each completed stop on the map would be a good tracker, and moving by train would make it feel like you’re making game progress, and also evoke the sense of traveling through Germany.

At each stop I used a zoom region to zoom in tightly on the city, and then an immediate “Box Out” transition on the following question slide so that, together, it would feel a bit like you’re zooming from the macro map to the micro restaurant where our protagonist needs some help. 

Beer Progress: Every time you answer a question correctly, the Maßkrug fills up a little more. By also using it to briefly recap the teaching point, it doubles as a bit of learning reinforcement.
And speaking of learning stuff, I chose to make it an all-or-nothing game. You’re required to answer each question correctly in order to go forward. One wrong answer and you’re back in Dresden waiting for the train.

Beer Progress

Beer Progress

I credit Michael Allen with this torture. I saw a banking example of his where you decide whether or not to approve a series of checks for payment. One wrong decision, and you’re back to check one. It ticks you off just enough that you get determined to beat the stupid thing, and while you’re at it, you learn the principles being taught.

The Big Finish

I won’t spoil it for you, but it’s kind of awesome.

Play It

My Oktoberfest Quest game is here, but you should also check out the other creative, amazing, and beautiful game ideas posted by others in the comments section of David’s original post here.

Update! Free Template Now Available

Since creating this, I’ve designed a free Storyline template of this game and done some videos to help you customize your own. All the scoop you need is right here!

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

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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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