Home     PowerPoint     Photoshop     Photos     Other     Studio     Info

Bookmark and Share  




Product Showcase




 



PowerPoint Blog


Saturday, August 16, 2008
posted by Geetesh at 11:49 AM IST



Greg FrieseGreg Friese, MS, NREMT-P is president of Emergency Preparedness Systems LLC and a paramedic, educator, author, and outdoor enthusiast. To learn more and to receive rapid e-learning design and production tips subscribe to the EPS blog at their site.

Geetesh: Tell us more about yourself, Emergency Preparedness Systems LLC, and the training programs you create.

Greg: I am the founder and president of Emergency Preparedness Systems LLC. EPS does four things:

  • We create narrated multimedia Flash movies for emergency responders.
  • We convert existing classroom training for online delivery.
  • We design and deliver new lessons and curriculum for online delivery that honor student's knowledge, experience, and time.
  • We teach our proven rapid e-learning for emergency responders production process to educators and training officers.
Our training programs for EMTs and paramedics, generally 25-30 minutes long, are used for continuing or refresher education. Since emergency responders work rotating shifts, it is very difficult for all employees to be in the training room together. Online lessons allow asynchronous delivery of the exact same content across multiple shifts and multiple stations. If users are called out for an emergency they can resume the training program when they return. Each lesson is approved by the Continuing Education Coordinating Board for EMS (CECBEMS) so students know that it will be accepted for local, state, or national recertification requirements. Most EPS content is distributed through CentreLearn.com and RapidCE.com.

Geetesh: Why do you use PowerPoint as the starting point for the creation of these programs? And what else do you use to enhance and distribute these programs.

Greg: We use PowerPoint for several reasons. First of all it is an excellent tool for us to storyboard a lesson. During initial production, each slide is given a working title and the script for the audio narration is written in the notes view. As production and editing progresses, notes for images, objects, and animations are added to the notes view. Once the script is finalized, slide production begins which includes a descriptive slide title and sub-title, insertion of images and objects, and animation formatting.

The final step is to convert the PowerPoint slides to Flash using Articulate Presenter. The audio is inserted and synchronized with the PowerPoint slide animations. The end user watches a narrated Flash movie inside the Articulate Presenter player. They may not even be aware that they are watching a movie that was created with PowerPoint.

We also use another Articulate product called Engage to create and insert custom Flash learning objects into the PowerPoint. The Articulate Engage Interactions publish inside the Articulate Presenter movie.

Categories: articulate, medicine, online_presentations, powerpoint, training

Labels: , , , , ,

0 comments

Links to this post



Comments:

Post a Comment

Links to this post:

Create a Link

    Follow me on Twitter...

    Archives:

    April 2003  |  May 2003  |  December 2003  |  January 2004  |  February 2004  |  March 2004  |  April 2004  |  May 2004  |  June 2004  |  July 2004  |  August 2004  |  September 2004  |  October 2004  |  November 2004  |  December 2004  |  January 2005  |  February 2005  |  March 2005  |  April 2005  |  May 2005  |  June 2005  |  July 2005  |  August 2005  |  September 2005  |  October 2005  |  November 2005  |  December 2005  |  January 2006  |  February 2006  |  March 2006  |  April 2006  |  May 2006  |  June 2006  |  July 2006  |  August 2006  |  September 2006  |  October 2006  |  November 2006  |  December 2006  |  January 2007  |  February 2007  |  March 2007  |  April 2007  |  May 2007  |  June 2007  |  July 2007  |  August 2007  |  September 2007  |  October 2007  |  November 2007  |  December 2007  |  January 2008  |  February 2008  |  March 2008  |  April 2008  |  May 2008  |  June 2008  |  July 2008  |  August 2008  |  September 2008  |  October 2008  |  November 2008  |  December 2008  |  January 2009  |  February 2009  |  March 2009  |  April 2009  |  May 2009  |  June 2009  |  July 2009  |  August 2009  |  September 2009  |  


    Featured Story

    Adobe Captivate's Edit View

    In an earlier post last week, I discussed Adobe Captivate's views and compared them to PowerPoint's deafult views. I also explained about the Storyboard View. In this post, I'll look at Captivate's Edit view, which in many ways is similar to PowerPoint's Normal view. If you are not already in Edit view within Captivate, choose the View drop-down in the toolbar, and select Edit View.

    Learn more here...


        
    Featured Book

    PowerPoint 2007 Complete Makeover Kit

    PowerPoint 2007 Complete Makeover Kit
    PowerPoint 2007 Complete Makeover Kit is out! Check the book on Amazon.com...

    And here are some free excerpts...


    Home |  PowerPoint |  Photoshop |  Templates |  Blog |  Notes |  Ezine |  Studio |  Advertise |  Feedback |  Info |  Site Map
    Store  |  RSS |  Privacy |  Testimonials
    Free PowerPoint Backgrounds | Free PowerPoint Templates | Free Christian PowerPoint Backgrounds
    Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape
      Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape


      ©2000-2009, Geetesh Bajaj. All rights reserved.

        since November 02, 2000