Tools for Building Branching Scenarios — from christytuckerlearning.com by Christy Tucker
When would you use Twine, Storyline, Rise, or other tools for building branching scenarios? It depends on the project and goals.
Excerpt:
When would you use Twine instead of Storyline or other tools for building branching scenarios? An attendee at one of my recent presentations asked me why I’d bother creating something in Twine rather than just storyboarding directly in Storyline, especially if I was using character images. Whether I would use Twine, Storyline, Rise, or something else depends on the project and the goals.
Read to collect the dots, write to connect them pic.twitter.com/YbgnKKFUNn
— David Perell (@david_perell) July 5, 2021
For years, I dreamed of building a tool to curate the best online essays.
Today, I have good news: Somebody else built it better than I ever could have.https://t.co/Rh7tWrXQ7q pic.twitter.com/EXvjyxSOJr
— David Perell (@david_perell) July 25, 2021
The writing process: Sketch the vision, then bring it to life pic.twitter.com/5HEmCzNuZ9
— David Perell (@david_perell) July 31, 2021
One of my favorite writing quotes: "If you want to have good ideas, you must have many ideas.”
— Linus Pauling pic.twitter.com/THEBB2IA8Q
— David Perell (@david_perell) July 29, 2021
3 innovative ways to integrate Twitter in your teaching [educatorstechnology.com]
Excerpt:
Much ink has been spilled on the use of Twitter in education. A simple search in Google using the phrase ‘Twitter in Education’ returns thousands if hits. My intent in this post is go beyond regurgitating what has already been written in this regard and rather provide you with innovative ways to use Twitter in your instruction.
Looking for some simple ways to make life just a little bit better? Dennis and Tom challenge themselves to fire through 20 simple technology-related tips in just 20 minutes, from useful shortcut commands, to favorite apps, to smarter tech habits, and more!













