When you develop a learning solution, it will go through many rounds of review and testing. Feedback is what turns your ideas into a polished, professional asset.
Think of these as a gift, although you might feel defensive when receiving comments. This input is making your work better.
Here are some examples of typical rounds of review:
- Storyboard sign-off – Either a SME or Senior ID will look over your outline and give it the stamp of approval
- SME Review – SMEs review a prototype and focus on the accuracy of content
- Edit – An editor reviews the text, captions, transcript, etc.
- QA- Quality Assurance is a test that helps you adhere to specific development guidelines and checks for functionality
- Peer Review – Some teams require fellow IDs to review content before publishing
- UAT – The focus of user acceptance testing is to understand the learning perspective and check that everything works
- Sandbox Test – This is something the developer performs before a course goes live in production
Your team probably doesn’t do all of these. Most teams have some combination of a few of the steps above.
Often we don’t get in-depth review like this on our portfolio samples, so I recommend asking a buddy to provide comments. That will make your portfolio stand out from the rest.
View original post on LinkedIn.
