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Thursday, June 28, 2012

Great post in UXmag.com on User Experience Leadership.

I wanted to point out a great article I read today on UXmag.com - 5 tips for effective UX Leadership by Paul Holcomb. His insights speak to many of the frustrations I know I feel when working on a project, especially when working in isolation (functional silo!). How do you move beyond being seen as the deliverables person, and move into a more strategic role within your company, or with your clients.

Greg often talks about what questions need to be asked BEFORE a project starts - and it is almost as if he and Paul got together on this article. I think it is because, from a UX perspective, these are common sense considerations. But common sense depends on common perspective, and when most of our co-workers or clients are NOT looking at things from the UX perspective, but rather from a project management or team management or even SME perspective, those things that are common sense to us aren't necessarily going to be common sense to them!

Check it out - its a great read!

Wade

Thursday, June 21, 2012

How to Replace the Master Page in SmartBuilder


I recently found myself in a situation where I needed to update the Master Page on 5 different lessons.  Through client revisions and added functionality, the original Master Page had evolved a great deal. I was frustrated to learn that although you can copy entire pages via the Page Sequence List (Edit/Page Sequence from the Authoring Stage), the Master Page is not included in this functionality. Faced with the prospect of recreating all of the actions in the Master Page across all 5 lessons I decided to search for a more efficient solution to no avail. My search was not completely fruitless as I did turn up a few capabilities that when combined can produce the same effect.

7 steps to Replacing your Master Page
  1. Open your lesson and save a copy.
  2. In your new saved copy, open the Page Sequence dialog and delete all of the pages in your lesson. (You will need to be viewing the Master Page to accomplish this as SmartBuilder will not allow you to delete a page you are currently viewing)
  3. Save this cleaned out lesson as a template




  4. Publish your new template. (found in My Content / Work in Progress /Templates) This will place your template in My Published Content / Templates allowing you to apply this template to a lesson.


  5. Open your lesson that needs the Master Page replaced, choose to view/edit the Master Page. On the Authoring Stage, press CTRL A (select all) and then Delete.

  6. Delete your Actions.  If you view your Action list you will see that all of the actions are now colored red.  This is because all of the objects these items were tied to have been deleted. Delete all of these Actions.


  7. The final step is to apply your saved template to your now cleaned out Master Page. From the Design Tab in the Template Pane, (on the bottom right) click on Apply Template. Locate and select your template in the Select Template dialog box.


You have now replaced your Master Page!  To apply this method to additional lessons simply repeat steps 5-7 on the desired lessons.

Know of an easier process?  I would love to hear it!

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

What I 'Got' from eLearning DevCon 2012


It goes without saying (...or, um, typing...?) that there was much to learn from this year's eLearning DevCon 2012 (http://elearningdevcon.com/), or "ELDC2012", held in the very beautiful Salt Lake City, Utah, June 6-8th, 2012. Greg Gardner, Damian Liska, Stephanie Spinapolice, and myself - all from ICF International - had the distinct honor of participating in ELDC2012 in several ways, such as:
Stephanie Spinapolice at the ICF booth
  • Presenting on highly technical topics
  • Giving bring your own laptop ("BYOL" sessions)
  • Having an exhibitor booth...
  • ...As well as being a sponsor the conference itself
However, beyond this, there are some very important 'take-aways' from ELDC2012, which I shall list here in no particular order or fashion:
Michael Sheyahshe giving presentation
  • SLC is beautiful
    • Having never been to Utah for any reason, it was nice to see such breathtaking views.
  • People are excited to both learn about and utilize technology
    • Directly after my talk on Augmented Reality ("AR"), one audience member used the information from my talk to create AR for her friend's band. While she was amazed at how easy it was, saying it took her 50 seconds, from start to finish. It is one of the best compliments, as a presenter to have someone actively use information I've given, almost directly in front of my eyes.
  • ELDC2012 participants are highly diverse, ranging from Designers, Developers, Programmers, and anything in-between
    • During my sessions and presentations, I noticed how diverse the audience members, participants, and other presenters were. As I answered questions and had ensuing conversations afterwards, I found that ELDC2012 participants came armed with questions and interest levels all across the board. They certainly kept me on my toes.
  • Social networking is alive and well
    • Not only were there many continuous Tweets on ELDC2012, I also made several friends at the conference, using social networks.  Power to the people !  :)
  • Thoughts on thinking
  •  Neuroscientist, Dr. Art Kohn
    • Dr. Art Kohn's Keynote on "Know the Mind. Know the Learner" was insightful and entertaining. The 'tricks' he played on the audience's minds - such as making the majority of the audience think that he had list the word that he had not listed - reminded me of a recent article in Wired on the way our minds, specifically memory, works. Wired's The Forgetting Pill Erases Painful Memories Forever, outlines how "our memories are not inert packets of data and they don’t remain constant", based on brain chemistry and neighboring receptors within our grey matter. Dr. Kohn's talk on the difference between encoding information the brain and retrieval of knowledge supported this notion...at least in my brain.
  • Apparently, there are several celebrity sightings in SLC
    • One of the several friends I made - from both presenting and via social networks (i.e., Twitter) - encountered not one, but two celebrities during ELDC2012. The first, Jay Mohr, was in our hotel at the university for some odd reason; next my Twitter friend spotted Katherine Heigl at the airport. Lucky...
In all, ELDC2012 was a wonderful experience and I'm proud to have been a part of it and look forward to seeing what eLearning DevCon has to offer in the near future.

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Ready for eLearnDevCon

I'm sitting in my hotel the day before the eLearnDevCon conference starts.  I've checked in, received my materials, verified all the sponsor materials have arrived and identified the rooms my team and I will be presenting in.  We are giving 11 presentations over the next three days on topics ranging from augmented reality to getting ISD and technology teams communicating better. Check our our sessions. It should be exciting to speak with the eLearning community and share ideas about how to improve eLearning products.

In addition to presenting, I'm planning on attending numerous presentations.  How do you decide which to participate in and which to read through the materials later - since you can't go to all of them?  The line up is very strong, containing topics each of my team members can attend, learn and implement through the coming year's worth of work.

Preparation for the conference has been exhausting - getting regular work done while getting sponsorship packages created, working with our corporate social networking people to figure out how best to use this medium while at the conference, oh yeah, and getting the sessions ready to present.

I trust all attendees are as excited about the conference as I am.  Let me know your thoughts.