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eLearning Learning is a community that tries to collect and organize the best information on the web that will help you learn and stay current on eLearning. If you would like to be included and or participate, please contact: Tony Karrer
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3 Articles match
"Toolbook"
,
"Courseware"
,
"Environment"
| The Latest from eLearning Learning Community | MORE |
| Training StandardsMonday, December 15, 2008 However, it all settled down to roughly Toolbook, Authorware and IconAuthor. I used to love these tools. Each allowed us to do some pretty incredible things. . But, I actually think things in the world of traditional online courseware development have become much easier. ? pipwerks.com " Building eLearning courses: Should we use eLearning authoring tools?Sunday, January 20, 2008 purchasing their product just to make edits), or outputs courseware that doesn’t adhere to web standards and best practices. . The key is for your course system to adhere to web standards .
ELearning software that outputs to HTML (such as Lectora and ToolBook) do not output HTML documents that. . I recommend this approach to others because I think it’s the most browser- and platform-neutral method, and opens up the development environment to any web developer without requiring expertise in a niche (and. to see a standard dialed back from the output. In shareability, the courseware designs are what is important to me. the design level between courseware build processes. Q&A - eLearning Standards Especially SCORMTuesday, September 5, 2006 SCORM is as close as you get to Mandatory in the world of eLearning. You want to implement your courseware to the SCORM standard if you plan to have it. , learning content is on different server than learning management. I've also seen it in an environment that had certain restrictions on JavaScript. post on issues that many of us have faced!) This does not appear to be a new posting, but one that I recently found for the ToolBook community. |
| The Best from eLearning Learning Community | MORE |
- Q&A - eLearning Standards Especially SCORM
SCORM is as close as you get to Mandatory in the world of eLearning. You want to implement your courseware to the SCORM standard if you plan to have it. , learning content is on different server than learning management. I've also seen it in an environment that had certain restrictions on JavaScript. post on issues that many of us have faced!) This does not appear to be a new posting, but one that I recently found for the ToolBook community. eLearning Technology - Tuesday, September 5, 2006 - Training Standards
However, it all settled down to roughly Toolbook, Authorware and IconAuthor. I used to love these tools. Each allowed us to do some pretty incredible things. . But, I actually think things in the world of traditional online courseware development have become much easier. ? eLearning Technology - Monday, December 15, 2008 - pipwerks.com " Building eLearning courses: Should we use eLearning authoring tools?
purchasing their product just to make edits), or outputs courseware that doesn’t adhere to web standards and best practices. . The key is for your course system to adhere to web standards .
ELearning software that outputs to HTML (such as Lectora and ToolBook) do not output HTML documents that. . I recommend this approach to others because I think it’s the most browser- and platform-neutral method, and opens up the development environment to any web developer without requiring expertise in a niche (and. to see a standard dialed back from the output. In shareability, the courseware designs are what is important to me. the design level between courseware build processes. delicious Random Mind - Sunday, January 20, 2008
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