The cartoon above was inspired by a conference I attended. In the session, the presenter went on and on about how PowerPoint was not effective for elearning and used PowerPoint to teach us this.
At another conference, I peeked in on a class that was teaching people how to build elearning courses. Now the class itself wasn’t a hands-on workshop. No, it was just a class that talked about learning and how to present ideas in an elearning context.
The irony was that this instructor had a plain white PowerPoint slide that was filled with about 15 bullet points. You’d think that considering his use of multimedia to teach his pupils, he’d have applied some of his elearning principles to the slides he was using? They’re not that different.
Anyway, enough of the diatribe. Here’s a post from the Rapid E-Learning Blog that covers What Everybody Ought To Know About Using PowerPoint for
E-learning.
As you’ll see in the demo, PowerPoint’s a very effective tool for elearning. In fact, considering the cost, ease of use, and some of the new features in PowerPoint 2007 (and the upcoming PowerPoint 2010) I’d say that PowerPoint will continue to be the elearning tool of choice for quite a few more years.
Just to show that the critics are wrong, here are links to examples built in PowerPoint. They were all published using the Articulate Studio ‘09. There’s a free 30-day trial, if you’re interested in creating your own rapid elearning courses.
CPR Prototype Course
CPR Prototype Course: This demo was built with just 20 slides. The first slide is a Flash animation, the simulation activity is built in Articulate Quizmaker ‘09, and the rest is all PowerPoint slides.
Office Ergonomics Course
Office Ergonomics: This example combines PowerPoint, Engage, and the older version of Quizmaker. I like it because it shows how the rapid elearning tools can work together to create both an interactive and engaging course.
Frog Dissection Demo
Frog Dissection Demo: I built this in PowerPoint to show a person I met at a conference that you can create an interactive and engaging course.
Beer Brewing Tour
Beer Brewing Tour: This was submitted for the Articulate Guru Awards. I know the author. He was a relatively new user and this was built in a couple of evenings…at a pub, of course.
Evernote Overview
Evernote Overview: This is a great example of nice visual design and effective use of the PowerPoint animations to teach people about Evernote’s features. Check out the cool scroll animation in the iPhone section.
I think you’ll agree that these are excellent examples of what you can with PowerPoint. Of course, no one’s suggesting that PowerPoint replaces sound instructional design or effective use of graphics. But then again, PowerPoint’s just a blank screen like Flash or any other authoring environment. If you have a beef, it’s not with PowerPoint. Go talk to the person who’s using it to bore you to death.