Today’s Question: how do you turn this:
in to this?
You have to read the blog post to find out.
Now read on…
If you’ve read The E-Learning Curve Blog recently, you’ll know that I have been creating quite a number of demos over the last seven weeks or so. Undertaking this activity has inspired me to write about some “back to basics” e-learning topics (including my recent evaluation of Camtasia and Captivate), and today I’m going to address the question “OK, I have my content, how do I upload it to an LMS?”
But first a (sort of) digression…
I facilitated a conference on Third-Level Distance Education and E-learning in late 2008. We covered many topics during the proceedings, including
- Online Teaching and Learning
- The Economics of E-Learning
- Assessment in On-line Education
- Impact of E-learning
Now don’t get me wrong – all of the above are highly interesting and useful topics, and I’ll talk ‘til the cows come home on any or all of them. My favorite part of these events however, is where I introduce and guide the audience through some hands-on e-learning content generation using any one of a number of content authoring tools.
To show (sometimes skeptical) participants just how easy it is to do this, I present a two-hour workshop called How to Create E-learning in Just Four Mouse Clicks (‘Four Clicks’ for short, in honor of the similarly-named Led Zeppelin song) …and as this is the digression I’m not going to elaborate any further on the Four Clicks workshop.
So digression over: once you have your e-learning content, what next? Well, you can always play it from your PC or Mac of course, but what you really need to do is load it into an environment where the audience can access it, which means placing the content on a Learning Management System (LMS) like one of the flavors of Blackboard.
Uploading content to an LMS is easy, but it’s not intuitive. Computers are obvious and logical. The logical and obvious approach is to pick through all of the ShockWave Flash (SWF) files, find the largest one (because that contains the content – right?) and use the Browse feature of your LMS to upload the content.
This inevitably ends in failure, because there’s more to distributing learning materials online
that just the content (I’ll talk about IMS manifests, specifications and metadata in the future). In fact, the process is quite straight-forward, and I could outline the steps here – that was the original intent of today’s post, but on reflection, I considered that it would probably be more useful if I created a PDF “How To” guide that you could download and keep close in your “My Useful E-Learning Stuff” directory on your local drive, to pull out when you need it, rather than trying to find the instructions buried in a blog entry.
For the purposes of this document, the presentation is created in Adobe Presenter, and was uploaded to Blackboard, but the process is common across most authoring tools and delivery platforms.
Click here to open the Adding Adobe Presenter presentations to Blackboard PDF (requires Adobe Reader).
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3 responses so far ↓
1
Brian S Friedlander
// Jan 27, 2009 at 2:30 am
Hi Michael:
I was wondering what the advantages and disadvantages of outputting the Adobe Presenter file as a PDF and putting that up on BlackBoard? Thanks and I enjoy reading your blog. Keep up the great work! Check out mine when you have the chance.
Regards
Brian
http://assistivetek.blogspot.com
2
Michael Hanley
// Jan 27, 2009 at 12:29 pm
Hi Brian,
Interesting: do you mean a PDF with embedded SWFs / FLVs and links, navigation etc?
I certainly look forward to checking out your site over the next few days.
Best,
Michael
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3
Upload Adobe Presenter content to a Learning Management System (LMS) – more | The E-learning Curve at Edublogs
// Jan 28, 2009 at 4:52 pm
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