How To Create a Storyboard for eLearning | Monday, October 21, 12:00 EDT, 14:00 UTC
In this eLearning Livestream, I will be sharing with you some of the practises I follow when writing an eLearning storyboard.
In this eLearning Livestream, I will be sharing with you some of the practises I follow when writing an eLearning storyboard. You will learn...
how much content needs to be included,
what're the most important things for your stakeholders to review,
how to write narration so that it can actually be spoken, and
what elements need to be included.
Join me over on YouTube if you wish to participate in the Live Chat.
Learning to Fly
Have you ever gotten to that point in the storyboard where you suddenly realize that you don’t know how to achieve the desired effect or interaction? I know I have. Especially early in my career. over ten years ago I worked alongside a more seasoned eLearning designer/developer who saw me struggling with a difficult project...
Have you ever gotten to that point in the storyboard where you suddenly realize that you don’t know how to achieve the desired effect or interaction? I know I have. Especially early in my career. over ten years ago I worked alongside a more seasoned eLearning designer/developer who saw me struggling with a difficult project. He said, “Why are you so stressed out and trying to reinvent eLearning?”
I said, “I want this eLearning course to be really good.”
He said something I have never forgotten, which I first thought was just an older designer being lazy, “Never add an interaction to your eLearning course that you are not 100% sure you know how to deliver.”
I said, “But don’t we always want to raise the bar and continuously improve?”
He said “Yes, but not while you are supposed to be building your project and meeting or exceeding your project deadlines.” He went on to say, “While you are searching the internet and asking questions online on how to build this particular interaction, who’s working on getting your project done?”
I told him, “nobody.”
“Exactly”, he said, “When you have some downtime work on reinventing the eLearning wheel and add those items to your eLearning tool belt for the next project. When you have a hard and fast deadline, get the job done with the tools that you have right now.”
I learned a lot that day and I think it’s something that we can all learn from. Sometimes I get questions from designers who have taken on more than their current knowledge can produce. My advice is to master the basics before trying to turn your first eLearning into something epic. Don’t worry, you will get there. It just takes time.