quizmaker 360
409 TopicsGetting Started with Studio 360
This series of tutorials will get you up and running quickly with Studio 360, which includes Presenter 360, Quizmaker 360, and Engage 360. First, watch each overview video, then dive into the tutorials and practice activities that follow. Presenter 360 Presenter 360: Building a Course with Content Library 360 Slide Templates Presenter 360: Recording Narration and Syncing Animations Presenter 360: Importing and Exporting Audio Presenter 360: Annotating Slide Content Presenter 360: Adding Quizzes and Interactions Presenter 360: Adding Content Library 360 Characters Presenter 360: Adding Videos and Web Objects Presenter 360: Adding Interactivity with Hyperlinks and Branching Presenter 360: Customizing the Course Player Presenter 360: Previewing and Publishing a Course Quizmaker 360 Quizmaker 360: Creating a Quiz Quickly in Form View Quizmaker 360: Designing Quiz Questions in Slide View Quizmaker 360: Building Freeform Quiz Questions Quizmaker 360: Editing the Quiz Result Slide Quizmaker 360: Organizing and Randomizing Quiz Questions Quizmaker 360: Customizing the Quiz Player Quizmaker 360: Previewing and Publishing a Quiz Engage 360 Engage 360: Creating Your First Interaction Engage 360: Adding and Editing Content Engage 360: Working with Interaction Properties Engage 360: Customizing the Interaction Player Engage 360: Previewing and Publishing an Interaction299Views0likes0CommentsQuizmaker 360: Importing Questions
You can import questions into Quizmaker 360 to save development time. This is helpful when you need to reuse questions from another quiz or when a subject matter expert (SME) drafts questions for you. Importing Slides from Another Quiz Importing Slides from a Quiz Template Importing Questions from an Excel Spreadsheet Importing Questions from a Text File Importing Slides from Another Quiz Open an existing quiz or create a new one. Then do either of the following: Go to the File tab on the ribbon and click Import Questions. In Question List View, go to the Home tab on the ribbon and click Import Questions. Browse to the quiz file that contains the slides you want to import and click Open. Quizmaker will display a list of slides from the quiz you selected. Mark the ones you want to import. If you want to import the result slide, be sure to mark Import and replace result slide in the lower left corner. Click OK to complete the import process. Importing Slides from a Quiz Template Open an existing quiz or create a new one. Then do either of the following: Go to the File tab on the ribbon and click Import Questions. In Question List View, go to the Home tab on the ribbon and click Import Questions. Browse to the quiz template that contains the slides you want to import and click Open. Quizmaker will display a list of slides from the quiz template you selected. Mark the ones you want to import. If you want to import the result slide, be sure to mark Import and replace result slide in the lower left corner. Click OK to complete the import process. Tip: You can also start a new quiz directly from a quiz template without going through the process of importing questions. See Using Custom Quiz Templates. Importing Questions from an Excel Spreadsheet First, populate an Excel spreadsheet with your questions and answers. Here's how: Download this template. (A sample question is provided for you.) Enter the Question Type, Points, Question Text, and Answer Choices for each question. See the table below for notes regarding each field. Save and close the spreadsheet. (Save in XLS or XLSX format.) Question Type Question type is required. Use these abbreviations for supported question types: TF True/False MC Multiple Choice MR Multiple Response FIB Fill in the Blank WB Word Bank MD Matching Drag and Drop MDN Matching Drop-Down SD Sequence Drag and Drop SDN Sequence Drop-Down NUM Numeric LIK Likert PO Pick One PM Pick Many WW Which Word SA Short Answer ESS Essay RD Ranking Drag and Drop RDN Ranking Drop-Down HM How Many Points Points are required for graded questions. Enter points for the correct answer. Points can range from -1000 to 1000. Points for incorrect answers aren't supported via import. Question Text Question Text is required for all questions. Answer Choices Answer Choices are required for all question types except Short Answer, Essay, and How Many. Enter up to 10 answer choices for each question. Designate correct answers for graded questions with an asterisk (*) at the beginning. Example: *True For choice-level feedback, separate each answer choice and its feedback with a pipe (|). Example: Houston | Sorry, the capital of Texas is Austin. For matching questions, separate each answer choice and its match with a pipe (|). Example: Texas | Austin Numeric questions only support "Equal to" answers via import. After populating an Excel spreadsheet with your questions, import it into Quizmaker: Open an existing quiz or create a new one. Then do either of the following: Go to the File tab on the ribbon and click Import Questions. In Question List View, go to the Home tab on the ribbon and click Import Questions. Browse to the Excel spreadsheet (XLS or XLSX) and click Open. Quizmaker will display a list of questions from the spreadsheet you selected. Mark the ones you want to import. Click OK to complete the import process. Tips for importing questions from an Excel spreadsheet: If there are any errors in your workbook, Quizmaker will list them. You can click Continue to import the questions that don't have errors and skip those that do, or you can click Cancel to correct the errors in your workbook and import it again. Formatting in your spreadsheet will be removed during import (italics, font size, hyperlinks, etc.). Text that follows two forward slashes (//) is identified as a comment. Comments will be ignored during import. (Leave the slashes in the column headers.) Only questions in the first worksheet (tab) of your Excel workbook will be imported. Additional worksheets will be ignored. Questions will be imported into the question list after the currently selected slide or, if a slide isn't selected, at the end of the quiz. The more questions you import, the longer it'll take to process and create them in Quizmaker. Importing Questions from a Text File First, populate a text file with your questions and answers. Here's how: Download this template.(Tip: Right-click the download link and choose Save link as from the context menu.) A sample question is provided for you in the template. Enter the Question Type, Points, Question Text, and Answer Choices for each question. Enter each item on a new line in the text file. See the table below for notes regarding each item. Save and close the text file. (Save in TXT format.) Question Type Question type is required. Use these abbreviations for supported question types: TF True/False MC Multiple Choice MR Multiple Response FIB Fill in the Blank WB Word Bank MD Matching Drag and Drop MDN Matching Drop-Down SD Sequence Drag and Drop SDN Sequence Drop-Down NUM Numeric LIK Likert PO Pick One PM Pick Many WW Which Word SA Short Answer ESS Essay RD Ranking Drag and Drop RDN Ranking Drop-Down HM How Many Points Points are required for graded questions. Enter points for the correct answer. Points can range from -1000 to 1000. Points for incorrect answers aren't supported via import. Question Text Question Text is required for all questions. Answer Choices Answer Choices are required for all question types except Short Answer, Essay, and How Many. Enter up to 10 answer choices for each question. Designate correct answers for graded questions with an asterisk (*) at the beginning. Example: *True For choice-level feedback, separate each answer choice and its feedback with a pipe (|). Example: Houston | Sorry, the capital of Texas is Austin. For matching questions, separate each answer choice and its match with a pipe (|). Example: Texas | Austin Numeric questions only support "Equal to" answers via import. After populating a text file with your questions, import it into Quizmaker: Open an existing quiz or create a new one. Then do either of the following: Go to the File tab on the ribbon and click Import Questions. In Question List View, go to the Home tab on the ribbon and click Import Questions. Browse to the text (TXT) file and click Open. Quizmaker will display a list of questions from the text file you selected. Mark the ones you want to import. Click OK to complete the import process. Tips for importing questions from a text file: If there are any errors in your text file, Quizmaker will list them. You can click Continue to import the questions that don't have errors and skip those that do, or you can click Cancel to correct the errors in your text file and import it again. Text that follows two forward slashes (//) is identified as a comment. Comments will be ignored during import. Questions will be imported into the question list after the currently selected slide or, if a slide isn't selected, at the end of the quiz. The more questions you import, the longer it'll take to process and create them in Quizmaker.200Views0likes0CommentsStudio 360 User Guide
New to Studio 360? See Getting Started with Studio 360 See the user guides below to learn how to transform PowerPoint slides into mobile and online courses with Presenter 360, create dynamic quizzes and surveys with Quizmaker 360, and dazzle learners with media-rich interactions inEngage 360. Presenter 360 User Guide Quizmaker 360 User Guide Engage 360 User Guide198Views0likes0CommentsQuizmaker 360 User Guide
Quizmaker 360: Creating a New Quiz Quizmaker 360: Setting Your Slide Size Quizmaker 360: Setting Quiz Properties Working with the Interface and Managing Project Files Quizmaker 360: Working with the Interface Quizmaker 360: Using Keyboard Shortcuts Quizmaker 360: Setting Quizmaker Options Quizmaker 360: Tips for Managing Project Files Using Question List View and Slide View Quizmaker 360: Managing Slides in Question List View Quizmaker 360: Using Question Groups to Pool and Randomize Questions Quizmaker 360: Designing Questions in Slide View Using Templates Quizmaker 360: Using Content Library 360 Templates Quizmaker 360: Using Custom Quiz Templates Adding Slides Quizmaker 360: Adding Form-Based Questions Quizmaker 360: Adding Freeform Questions Quizmaker 360: Drag-and-Drop Questions Quizmaker 360: Pick-One Questions Quizmaker 360: Pick-Many Questions Quizmaker 360: Text-Entry Questions Quizmaker 360: Hotspot Questions Quizmaker 360: Shortcut-Key Questions Quizmaker 360: Adding Blank (Non-Question) Slides Quizmaker 360: Importing Questions Quizmaker 360: Editing the Result Slide Working with the Question Editor Quizmaker 360: Editing Questions in Form View Quizmaker 360: Editing Questions in Slide View Quizmaker 360: Shuffling Answer Choices Quizmaker 360: Choosing Feedback and Branching Options Quizmaker 360: Using the Feedback Window Quizmaker 360: Working with Feedback Layers Quizmaker 360: Assigning a Score to Graded Questions Quizmaker 360: Choosing the Number of Attempts for Graded Questions Quizmaker 360: Making Ungraded Questions Required or Optional Working with Content Library 360 Media Quizmaker 360: Adding Content Library 360 Characters Quizmaker 360: Editing Content Library 360 Characters Quizmaker 360: Adding Content Library 360 Photos Quizmaker 360: Adding Content Library 360 Illustrations Quizmaker 360: Adding Content Library 360 Icons Quizmaker 360: Adding Content Library 360 Videos Working with Pictures Quizmaker 360: Adding Pictures Quizmaker 360: Adding Screenshots Quizmaker 360: Formatting Pictures, Screenshots, and Characters Working with Videos Quizmaker 360: Adding Videos Quizmaker 360: Editing Videos Quizmaker 360: Adjusting Video Properties Working with Audio Quizmaker 360: Adding Audio Quizmaker 360: Editing Audio Quizmaker 360: Using the Audio Tools Quizmaker 360: Adding a Narration Script Working with Web Content Quizmaker 360: Adding Web Objects Quizmaker 360: Editing Web Objects Working with Shapes, Captions, and Text Boxes Quizmaker 360: Adding Shapes Quizmaker 360: Adding Captions Quizmaker 360: Adding Text Boxes Quizmaker 360: Adding Symbols Quizmaker 360: Adding Hyperlinks Quizmaker 360: Adding Scrolling Panels Quizmaker 360: Formatting Shapes, Captions, and Text Boxes Working with Text Quizmaker 360: Using the Font Formatting Options Quizmaker 360: Using the Paragraph Formatting Options Quizmaker 360: Finding and Replacing Text Quizmaker 360: Replacing Fonts Quizmaker 360: Translating Quizzes Quizmaker 360: Working with the Clipboard Formatting, Sizing, and Positioning Objects Quizmaker 360: Formatting Radio Buttons and Check Boxes Quizmaker 360: Applying Quick Styles Quizmaker 360: Using the Format Shape/Format Picture Window Quizmaker 360: Fill Formatting Quizmaker 360: Line Color Formatting Quizmaker 360: Line Style Formatting Quizmaker 360: Shadow Formatting Quizmaker 360: Picture Formatting Quizmaker 360: Text Box Formatting Quizmaker 360: Ordering, Grouping, Sizing, and Positioning Objects Quizmaker 360: Using the Size and Position Window Quizmaker 360: Setting Grid, Guide, and Ruler Preferences Working with the Timeline Quizmaker 360: Using the Timeline Applying Animations and Slide Transitions Quizmaker 360: Adding Animations Quizmaker 360: Syncing Animations Quizmaker 360: Adding Transitions to Slides and Feedback Layers Customizing Your Quiz Design Quizmaker 360: Using Design Themes Quizmaker 360: Working with Theme Colors Quizmaker 360: Working with Theme Fonts Quizmaker 360: Changing the Background Design Quizmaker 360: Using Slide Masters Quizmaker 360: Using Feedback Masters Customizing the Player Quizmaker 360: Working with the Player Quizmaker 360: Choosing Player Features Quizmaker 360: Customizing the Question List Quizmaker 360: Changing the Player Colors, Font, and Font Size Quizmaker 360: Customizing the Text Labels Quizmaker 360: Changing the Browser Settings and Player Size Quizmaker 360: Changing the Resume Behavior Quizmaker 360: Enabling Right-to-Left Language Support Quizmaker 360: Saving and Switching Players Quizmaker 360: Restricting Which Mobile Device Orientations Learners Can Use Previewing and Publishing a Quiz Quizmaker 360: Previewing a Quiz Quizmaker 360: Publishing a Quiz to Presenter 360 Quizmaker 360: Publishing a Standalone Quiz to Review 360 Quizmaker 360: Publishing a Standalone Quiz for Web Distribution Quizmaker 360: Publishing a Standalone Quiz for LMS Distribution Quizmaker 360: Publishing a Quiz to Microsoft Word Quizmaker 360: Publishing a Quiz for Mobile Devices99Views0likes0CommentsGetting Started with Quizmaker 360
This series of tutorials will get you up and running quickly with Quizmaker 360. First, watch this overview, then dive into the tutorials and practice activities below. Quizmaker 360: Creating a Quiz Quickly in Form View Quizmaker 360: Designing Quiz Questions in Slide View Quizmaker 360: Building Freeform Quiz Questions Quizmaker 360: Editing the Quiz Result Slide Quizmaker 360: Organizing and Randomizing Quiz Questions Quizmaker 360: Customizing the Quiz Player Quizmaker 360: Previewing and Publishing a Quiz99Views0likes0CommentsStoryline 360: Importing Slides from Quizmaker
Import your Quizmaker quizzes into Storyline 360 to save time and reuse existing question lists. 32-bit Storyline 360 supports quizzes from Quizmaker ‘09/‘13/360. 64-bit Storyline 360 only supports quizzes from Quizmaker 360. (Quizmaker doesn't need to be installed to import quizzes.) Importing Quizzes Editing Questions Working with Feedback Layers Working with Result Slides Importing Quizzes First, do any of the following: Click Import on the Storyline start screen and select Import Quizmaker. Go to the File tab on the ribbon, scroll to Import, and click Quizmaker. Go to the Home tab on the ribbon, click New Slide, scroll to Import, and choose Quizmaker. Go to the Slides tab on the ribbon, click New Slide, and choose Quizmaker. Browse to the Quizmaker quiz you want to import and click Open. If you opened the wrong quiz or want to select a different one, click the ellipsis button (...) in the upper right corner to browse for another file. Storyline 360 will display thumbnail images for all the slides in the quiz, divided into question groups based on the original quiz file. Select the slides you want to import. By default, all slides will be imported unless you choose otherwise. You can tell which slides are selected by their blue outline. To select or deselect a slide, just click it. The blue outline will either appear or disappear to indicate its status. You can also click Select All or None in the upper right corner to quickly select or deselect all slides at once. To select or deselect an entire question group and all the slides it contains, click the question group name. To make navigation a little easier, you can also collapse and expand question groups by clicking the triangle to the left of each question group name. (Note that collapsing and expanding question groups doesn't impact whether they'll be imported or not.) Use the Insert into scene drop-down at the bottom of the window to choose where the quiz slides should appear in your course. You can insert them into a new scene, which is the default option, or you can choose an existing scene. If you choose a new scene, use the Scene field to give it a name. Click Import to complete the process. Tip: Question groups that are randomized in Quizmaker will be imported into Storyline 360 as question banks. Question groups that aren't randomized in Quizmaker will be imported into Storyline 360 as individual slides in the selected scene. Editing Questions After importing a quiz into Storyline 360, you can edit questions like any other slide. You can also use the Form View and Slide View buttons in the Question panel on the right side of the screen to toggle between both editing workspaces. To learn more about the question editor, including scoring, number of attempts, feedback, and branching, see this user guide. Working with Feedback Layers Storyline 360 uses feedback layers to display feedback for each question. There are various types of feedback you can give learners, including Correct, Incorrect, Try Again, Review, and Thank You. Storyline 360 will automatically generate some feedback layers for you, but you can add more. To add, edit, or delete feedback layers, go to the question slide you want to modify, then use the Slide Layers panel in the lower right corner of the screen. Working with Result Slides When you import a quiz into Storyline 360, the result slide from the quiz will automatically be imported as well, and the imported questions will be associated with that result slide by default. However, Storyline 360 supports multiple result slides in the same project, so you can change the result slide that tracks each question if you’d prefer to break the original quiz into multiple assessments in Storyline 360. Learn more about result slides.99Views0likes0CommentsQuizmaker 360: Creating a New Quiz
Articulate Quizmaker 360 lets you create dynamic quizzes and surveys in a snap. You can create new quizzes from scratch or save time by using templates. Starting a New Quiz from Scratch Starting a New Quiz from a Custom Template Saving a New Quiz Changing the Slide Background Color for Quizzes in Articulate Presenter Courses Starting a New Quiz from Scratch There are three ways to begin a new quiz from scratch: Click New Project on the Quizmaker start screen. Press Ctrl+N on your keyboard. If you already have a project open, go to the File tab on the ribbon and click New. Quizmaker will open a new quiz in Question List View. Starting a New Quiz from a Custom Template Save time by starting quizzes from templates with predefined quiz settings, slide size, design themes, slide masters, feedback masters, result slide, and player settings. If a template has any pre-built questions or content slides, they’ll also be added automatically to new quizzes. To start a new quiz from a template, click From quiz template on the Quizmaker start screen, then browse to the template you want to use and click Open. To learn how to create your own custom quiz templates, see this user guide. Saving a New Quiz To save a new quiz, do any of the following: Press Ctrl+S. Click the Save icon on the Quick Access Toolbar in the upper left corner of the screen. Go to the File tab on the Quizmaker ribbon, then choose Save or Save As. If you attempt to close Quizmaker without first saving your quiz, you'll be prompted to save it. To avoid unexpected behavior, save quizzes on your local hard drive (typically your C: drive). For more tips on managing your project files, see this user guide. Changing the Slide Background Color for Quizzes in Articulate Presenter Courses When your quiz is part of an Articulate Presenter course, we recommend using the same slide size in Quizmaker and PowerPoint. If they're different, the quiz will be centered on the PowerPoint slide and, if necessary, scaled down to fit within the slide. If a quiz has different dimensions than PowerPoint, the slide background color from the Presenter player will show around the quiz. To change this color, do the following: Open your presentation in PowerPoint. Go to the Articulate tab on the ribbon and click Player. Click Colors & Effects on the ribbon. Click Show advanced color editing. From the Edit item drop-down, choose Base >> Slide Background. Use the color selectors to choose your background colors. Click OK. Tip: The player colors in Presenter take precedence over the player colors in Quizmaker. Be sure to set your player colors in Presenter. You Might Also Want to Explore: Setting Your Slide Size Setting Quiz Properties Tips for Managing Project Files Adding Form-Based Questions Adding Freeform Questions99Views0likes0CommentsHow to Write Good E-Learning Quiz Questions
E-learning quizzes are a great way to find out whether learners have fully digested (and understood) course material. To get a clear picture of where learners stand, your quiz will need to present them with the right questions. Here are five tips on how to write effective e-learning quiz questions. Tip 1: Align E-Learning Quiz Questions with Course Objectives Your e-learning quiz questions are part of a content hierarchy; they reinforce your course material, which in turn supports your course objectives. Aligning these elements will help your learners retain key messages and make your course more cohesive overall. Write questions that focus on recall and application of material in your course. Don’t include “gotchas” or questions on material you didn’t cover in the course. Your goal is to assess how well learners master the material, not to trick them or make them look (or feel) stupid. Tip 2: Use a Variety of Quiz Question Types E-learning quiz questions can come in all shapes and sizes: multiple choice, fill-in-the-blank, open response, drag-and-drop, and many more. And each has its own assessment purpose, so don’t get locked into asking a single type of question, from a single perspective. Be open to trying other assessment techniques for learners. For example, scenario-based questions or case studies that require learners to apply what they’ve learned to realistic situations can often test learner knowledge better than traditional quiz questions. Tip 3: Make Your Quiz Questions Clear and Concise Save your learners the trouble of decoding wordy or circuitous questions. Your questions should be short—ideally a single sentence. Use familiar prompts like who, what, where, when, why, and how. And always, always, use plain language, free of jargon or fancy vocabulary. As an example, look at these two quiz questions: Question #1: What’s the next thing a loan officer should do when you’re reviewing loan applications, when you know your client’s been working for at least five years, and you’re processing his/her loan? Question #2: After you’ve confirmed 5+ years of employment history, what’s your next step to process your client’s loan application? The first example is a jumbled mess! The second is simple to understand. So, be conscious of your wording, phrasing, and tenses. Direct your question to your learner, omit any unnecessary information, and streamline as much as possible so your learner doesn’t waste valuable time decoding questions. Tip 4: Fine-Tune Your Quiz Question Answer Set With the right answers in place, it may be tempting to fill in the remaining choices in your answer set with answers that are easy, bogus, or downright silly. But if you do this, you’ll miss an opportunity to ask the learner to distinguish nuances. So ask an SME or other specialized resource to coach you on choices that go deeper than the surface level. Or, consider including fewer choices in your answer set: three good choices are better than five haphazard ones. Be sure to include specific directions on how learners should answer your quiz questions. Select from a list? Pick one? Pick many? Open response? Guide your learners by explaining to them exactly what they need to do. Tip 5: Create Feedback for Your Quiz Questions Feedback is the response you give to learners after they answer a quiz question—and it’s a hidden e-learning gem! Providing feedback is a prime teachable moment in which you can offer valuable information without distracting from the main message in your lessons. When you write quiz question feedback, make sure it explains what the correct answer is and why. For example, if your learner answered incorrectly that stop signs are yellow, then your feedback might look like this: That’s not quite right. Stop signs are red so people can see them better. If your learner answered correctly, then your feedback should reinforce why the answer is correct, like this: That’s right—stop signs are red so people can see them better. Make your feedback short and sweet so it doesn’t bog down your quiz. Feedback should reinforce the lesson without distracting or fatiguing learners. Wrap-Up Remember, it’s worth the effort to write good e-learning quiz questions because you’ll end up with more accurate feedback about your learners. And when you see clearly how learners are faring with your quizzes, you’ll have better insight into whether your course material is preparing them adequately for the final assessment. If you start to see performance patterns, you’ll know it’s time to consider a tune-up on that section of your course. For more tips on creating effective quizzes and giving helpful feedback, check out these related articles: 6 Common Quizzing Mistakes and How to Avoid Them Improve Your Quizzes with These Do’s and Don’ts 5 Tips for Providing Meaningful Feedback in Your Training And remember to follow us on Twitter and come back to E-Learning Heroes regularly for more helpful advice on everything related to e-learning. If you have any questions, please share them in the comments.99Views0likes17CommentsQuizmaker 360: Using Custom Quiz Templates
Quiz templates are huge time savers. Create your design once, then reuse it for new quizzes. You can even share templates with other content authors for consistency. Templates can include quiz settings, design themes, default questions, a customized result slide, player properties, and more. Creating Templates Editing Templates Sharing Templates Using Templates to Create New Quizzes Creating Templates Creating templates is a two-step process: design and conversion. Step 1: Design First, start a new quiz or open an existing one, then design it the way you want the template to appear. Remember that everything in your quiz gets baked into the template, including: Question groups Slides and content Quiz properties Design themes Slide masters Feedback masters Result slide Player properties Step 2: Convert When you're ready to convert your quiz to a template, do this: Go to the File tab on the ribbon and click Save As. Browse to a location on your local hard drive where you want to save your template. Give your template a recognizable file name. Use the Save as type drop-down to select Quizmaker Template (*.quiztemplate). Click Save. Editing Templates To edit a quiz template: Double-click the *.quiztemplate file to open it in Articulate Quizmaker. Make the necessary edits. Save the file. (You can press Ctrl+S or click the Save button on the quick access toolbar.) Sharing Templates To share a quiz template with other content authors, just send them the *.quiztemplate file you created. You can use email, network drives, USB drives, cloud services, or any other form of file sharing. Make sure recipients save the *.quiztemplate file to their local hard drive before they use it. Using Templates to Create New Quizzes To use a quiz template, do this: Launch Articulate Quizmaker. On the Quizmaker start screen, click From quiz template. Browse to the *.quiztemplate file you want to use and click Open. A new quiz will be created with all the settings and content from the template. Edit the quiz as you’d like, then save and publish it.99Views0likes0CommentsQuizmaker 360: Setting Quiz Properties
Articulate Quizmaker 360 lets you define several properties for your quiz, including the title, passing score, timer, and default settings for question slides—all on one simple window. Accessing Quiz Properties Defining Quiz Information Setting Question Defaults Accessing Quiz Properties To open the Quiz Properties window, switch to Question List View and click Quiz Properties on the ribbon. Defining Quiz Information Select the Quiz Info tab on the left side of the Quiz Properties window, define the following items for your quiz, and click OK. Quiz Title The quiz title defaults to the name of your project file, but you can change it to anything you'd like. Changing the title won’t affect the name of your project file.The maximum length for aquiz title is 80 characters. Tip: To show or hide the title in your published output, see Choosing Player Features. Passing Score For graded quizzes, enter the percentage learners must achieve to pass. Time Limit If you'd like to add a timer to your quiz, mark the End quiz after box. Enter the maximum number of minutes and seconds allowed to complete the quiz in the corresponding fields. Then select a Timer format. The timer will display in the upper right corner of your published quiz. If learners don't complete the quiz in the allotted time, they’ll be interrupted by a time-limit message and taken to the result slide. (Unanswered graded questions will be marked incorrect.) You can edit the time-limit message in your text labels. Timer Tips: Theresponsive playerwill always usethe time remaining format. When quizzes are embedded in Articulate Presenter courses, the timer format is controlled by Presenter. See this user guide for details. Setting Question Defaults Select the Question Defaults tab on the left side of the Quiz Properties window, then define the default settings for new question slides. Tip: Existing questions in your quiz won't be affected when you change the default settings, so it's best to set your question defaults before adding slides to your quiz. (You can override the default settings by adjusting the properties for individual slides.) Points awarded Enter the number of points for correct answers. Points can range from -1000 to 1000. Attempts permitted Select the number of times learners can attempt each graded question. Shuffle answers Mark this box to shuffle (randomize) answer choices for each question. Uncheck it if you want answer choices to appear in the order you define. Allow user to skip survey questions Mark this box to make survey questions optional. Uncheck it to make survey questions required. (Graded questions are always required.) Provide feedback for graded questions by default Mark this box to give learners feedback for graded questions. Uncheck it to suppress feedback. Provide feedback for survey questions by default Mark this box to give learners feedback for survey questions. Uncheck it to suppress feedback.99Views0likes0Comments