Archive for August, 2007

10-20-30 Rule

24Aug07

I like the concept of this. Guy Kawasaki’s 10-20-30 rule says that a PowerPoint presentation should have ten slides, last no more than twenty minutes, and contain no font smaller than thirty points. I think Merlin Mann of 43folders said it best…”Get in, get out, and don’t make people squint. Awesome.”


[via Soul Soup ] This is a good reference to see if there are other tools that you could be using to collaborate better.

How are you using these tools that are listed? Are there any that are new to you?


Based on Brandon Hall research the most common requirements when selecting an authoring toll are:
1.    Novice friendly, yet still has underlying extensibility for complex interaction types.
2.    No plug-in required (with the exception of Flash output).
3.    Adherence to SCORM specification and AICC standards. (The real need is full interoperability with many LMS solutions.)
4.    Short learning curve [...]


Top 10 Tools

21Aug07

via Jane Hart Here is a list of many elearning professionals and their top 10 tools. See my own personal top 10 below:

Firefox
Google:  Reader,Search, iGoogle & NoteBook
Del.icio.us
Picnik.com
Word Press
Wikispaces
Articulate: Presenter & Quiz Maker (also Engage)
Audacity
Captivate
PowerPoint


I couldn’t agree more…”The Slide Is Not Your Script” “The Slide Is Not For Documentation Purposes” & “Your Slide Is Not Your Note Page”
The Public Speaking Blog » Blog Archive » The Pointlessness of PowerPoint


Although this article is touted for NEW trainers & teachers I think we can take a moment to review this to check in and make sure we’re doing many of these things regardless of how long we’ve been a trainer or teacher.
Creating Passionate Users: Ten Tips for New Trainers/Teachers

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Via Pivotal Public Speaking, I found this article referencing some research saying that only 7% of the information conveyed in presentation comes from text. But think of the last one you saw…was it dominated by text? Too often we cram way too much text at the expense of other, more effective options. Visual communication accounts [...]


Nice article from Digital Inspiration discussing options for putting presentations online with advantages of each
http://labnol.blogspot.com/2007/08/upload-powerpoint-presentations-ppt.html

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This is the blog for one of my summer classes. The thing I like best is that Karl is “eating his own dogfood” and using blogs and wikis for all the class content. Plus, us participants are creating the content ourselves. Kind of reminiscent of the Encyclopedia of Educational Technology maintained by Bob Hoffman.