ARTICULATE STORYLINE 360: The Awesomeness of the Media Library

Have you ever had this happen to you? You insert an image into your Storyline project and then sometime later you decide to use the image on another slide. However, your project is large (multiple scenes and slides) and you're having a hard time finding that pesky image. How about this one? You're making your project accessible for learners with disabilities. You're pretty sure you added alternative text to a specific image but now you're doubting yourself. Is there a quick way to check? Or perhaps you've used an image in a project and someone on the team wants to use it too. Is there a quick way to share the image?
 
If you add images, characters, audio, or video to your projects (I think that covers all eLearning developers, everywhere), you'll love Articulate Storyline 360's Media Library (View tab > Views group).
 
 
The Media Library displays a list of all of the project's assets grouped on tabs for Images, Characters, Audio, and Video.
 
 
I love the ability to select an image and, from the right of the Media Library, add Alt text (for accessibility) and notes. You can also see where the image has been used throughout the project and add the same accessibility text to all instances of the image.
 
 
 
You can also import assets directly into the Media Library and export any asset (so it can be shared with team members).
 
 
 
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Kevin Siegel is the founder and president of IconLogic, Inc. He has written hundreds of step-by-step computer training books on applications such as Adobe Captivate, Articulate Storyline, Adobe RoboHelp, Adobe Presenter, and TechSmith Camtasia. Kevin spent five years in the U.S. Coast Guard as an award-winning photojournalist and has three decades’ experience as a trainer, publisher, technical writer, and eLearning developer. Kevin is a Certified Master Trainer (CMT), Certified Technical Trainer (CTT+), Certified Online Professional Trainer (COTP), and a frequent speaker at trade shows and conventions.

Writing Meaningful Quiz Questions

One guideline textbooks give about quiz writing is that the questions have to be meaningful to your learners. Each question should be about something important—something that the employee actually does need to know or be able to do. The questions should be about something that everyone would agree matters in the workplace—at least for the intended audience of the training.
 
Let’s take an example. I was teaching a class for an organization, and one of the learning objectives was that the employee must know all five of our board members.
 
One of the questions on the quiz was this: What is Board Member Jane Jones’s middle initial?
 
Imagine what your students would say if you wrote a question about such a minor point of trivia like this! I can just hear the grumblings:
  • That’s not fair!
  • Why does it matter?
  • I can name all five board members. I forgot one middle initial, and I get dinged on my quiz score?
On the face of it, this question does not meet the criterion of meaningfulness.
 
But what if I told you that the students in this case were the administrative assistants responsible for proofreading all of the Board’s correspondence?
 
Now, it makes sense that they need to know the middle initial. They need to be able to recognize immediately if the initial is wrong. They must also know many other details that seem like trivia to another training audience. They need to spell the names right. They need to know how many tabs to indent the signature line. They need to know whether to capitalize the phrase Board Member.
 
Let’s see what happens if the audience is different. What if I told you that the students are the security guards at the front door of the building? The objective is the same: They must know all five board members. But now, what do they have to know?
 
This time, the middle initial is probably meaningless trivia. The guard needs to know how to recognize Ms. Jones on sight! My proofreaders may know Ms. Jones’s middle initial, but they could walk right by her in the hallway and never realize it. However, the guard must know immediately to allow Ms. Jones into the building.
 
In summary, your quiz questions have to be meaningful, specifically to the training audience. It is all too easy to write trivia questions. Think about your training audience to keep your questions meaningful.