This has worked well with my Practical
Font Design course, presently offered on Udemy.
Not exact matches
Additional materials (handouts, worksheets)-- keep consistency in the basic
design elements (logos, color scheme,
fonts) throughout the whole
course, including the bonus materials.
Verify that every graphic,
font, and image falls in line with the overall theme to prevent a fragmented eLearning
course design.
Fonts can really liven up
course design and there are lots of great, free
font sites.
Use colors,
fonts, bolding, italics, and text sizes for a specific purpose in your eLearning
course design.
You can carry this over to your eLearning
course design by changing the
font type.
A
course may have exceptional content, but if the user is confused by a poorly
designed interface or gets distracted by garish
fonts and graphics, they may not end up absorbing the material.
When
designing an eLearning
course, it's easy to overlook the use of
fonts and stick with the default styles.
I've finally gotten my practical
font design video
course up online and available for you.
You don't have to overpay but, remember, your cover
design includes not only where the image is placed, but also what the image is, whether or not you need an image, your title
font, your subtitle
font, your author name and, of
course, colors, stacking, shading and so many of the important elements that go in to
design.
One of my Christmas presents to you this year is my video
course for Practical
Font Design using FontLab 5 on Udemy.
In the process of producing my popular video
course on Practical
Font Design, I radically streamlined my workflow for FontLab Studio 5.
Whoever developed this app needs to take a
course in adaptive
design or something - I use a 13.3 inch 2 - in - 1 for my main computing device and the
font size in this app is unforgivably small.