Tuesday, January 19, 2010

My Arsenal of e-Learning Tools.


I'm always curious what other developers have in their 'tools' portfolio so in the spirit of not being selfish, here is my e-Learning arsenal of tools.

Lectora - Up until recently this was my primary development tool. A simple-as-pie WYSIWYG editor that makes it a snap to do the basics (Mouse-over, show & hides, etc.). It has a built-in assessment/quiz tool but with the exception of the Multiple Choice and True/False it sorta bites. Image import is as easy and drag-and-drop and you can import flash files, videos, etc. The biggest compliment to Lectora is it's ease of use. I like it as the primary tool that I embed content into. Also a nice tool for building websites.

Articulate - I have most of the suite of Articulate products (Presenter, Engage, QuizMaker) and after some trepidation at first, I have really warmed up to this PowerPoint to e-Learning tool. If anything it has forced me to improve my PowerPoint skills three-fold. Although it lacks some of the most basic of e-Learning functionality like having a button change color on mouse-over, or easily doing show & hides on one page, it makes up for it's deficiencies in other avenues. Unleash the beast, learn PowerPoint and make some cool stuff with this bad-boy. Two words; Animations and Annotations!

Adobe Captivate - My tool of choice for system simulations. Open an application, click record and your output is a very cool simulation. Think of it as a screen recording tool on steroids. You can even create stand-alone courses in Captivate, although I've never done this because I'm not comfortable with the SCORM output or incorporation into my LMS. I usually take my Captivate output and embed it into Lectora or Articulate. Both Lectora and Artciulate make SCORM/LMS publishing very easy.

Adobe Flash - Although I have used this tool less when the newer version forced you to learn Actionscript, I still like it to create simple text and image animations, plus I like to snag free flash animations (there's a ton of them out there) and then manipulate them to my liking.

Adobe Photoshop - The industry standard for image creation and manipulation. I use it to create buttons, text, and edit images I might purchase from a service like iStock Photo. Although I have recently been able to create some very cool things in PowerPoint using Clipart, I still rely on Photoshop for the heavy lifting.

Audacity - This is a free audio editing software and I just love it for recording and editing audio. A must have for your portfolio, especially considering it's free.