07/05/2019
In today's article, I will focus on this very important process of eLearning design and development. I will help you understand what a storyboard is, why it is crucial for every eLearning project, what you need to do before and after storyboarding, and how you can create a storyboard on your own.
Ready? Let’s begin.
After you receive the training content from the Subject Matter Expert, you have to select an appropriate Instructional Design technique, define the sequence/structure of the training, and create a storyboard.
What Is A Storyboard?
A storyboard in Instructional Design is a visual representation of the training. It shows how the content will be structured (module per module, screen by screen), and how it will be visualized. In addition to describing the content and the corresponding visuals, it may include a description of the User Interface, navigation, buttons, notes to eLearning developers, etc.
Why Do You Need To Create Storyboards?
What To Do Before You Start Storyboarding?
Before you start working on your storyboard, you need to find the answers to the following questions:
The storyboard is usually created in PowerPoint or Word. The document needs to include the following information:
On-screen text, a script (narrator’s text), instructions, slide transcript, video subtitles
Illustrations, images, charts, diagrams, infographics, icons, tables
Entrance and exit animations, object animations, animations duration
Download links to ready for embed audio/video, instructions/description of audio/video content that needs to be developed
Main navigation (home, menu, help), slide navigation (previous, next, custom navigation buttons)
Pre-tests, short tests after completion of a learning objective, final comprehensive test, decision-making exercises, etc.
Before or after the theoretical part
Files for download, external links, glossaries, etc.
Keep in mind that you need to be very careful about how you choose and integrate all elements (text, graphics, etc.). Your goal is to create effective and complete training. However, it should not lead to cognitive overload.
What To Do After You Are Ready With The Storyboard?
Once you are ready with the first version of your storyboard, it is a good idea to review it and edit it. It takes more than one attempt to write a quality storyboard, so do not worry if you need to make several edits.
Once you, your team and the customer are happy with the storyboard, you can continue with the development stage.
Summary
Storyboarding is not an easy process, but if you learn to create effective storyboards, you will become а top Instructional Designer, and your trainings will be engaging and powerful.
By Vesela Georgieva