Testing your course
Before requesting publication, it is sensible to test that everything is working as you expect. Note that your course will not be published if it does not meet OpenLearn Create’s publication criteria.
Briefing another user
When you brief someone else to review your course, it’s important to be specific about the level of changes you want them to make or the comments that you would like them to offer. For example, you may only have time or opportunity to have typos corrected. Conversely, you may want someone to test your course from the viewpoint of a learner and to highlight anything that should be clearer.
Course content
Unless you brief them to do otherwise, generally we recommend that the person checking your course should:
- proofread the text for consistency and sense
- ensure that the spelling and grammar are correct
- ensure that the text adheres to any house style guides/conventions
- check headings
- check numbering and sequences
- check that links go to the correct page
- check that cross-references to other parts of the course
- check that the references are correctly cited and listed.
You may also want them to carry out a final check of the accuracy of your content – especially if they are subject experts.
User testing
As well as asking someone else to check your course’s content having, user testing can be useful for various purposes.
You may find it useful to use the following checklist:
- Navigation: Does it work? Can users find their way through your course successfully? Are there any dead ends? Is the structure of the course clear? If a learner lands anywhere in the course is it clear where they are?
- Accessibility: Have you provided transcripts for all the AV materials you have uploaded? Are all your in-text links labelled usefully for users who rely on screen readers?
- Copyright: Do all your images, videos and audio files have suitable captions, acknowledging the source and licensing information if necessary?
- Keeping learners in the course: Do you have instructions to view external links in a new tab or window so that learners do not navigate away from the site?
- Technical aspects: Do the interactive features work? Does the course work across different internet browsers and on tablets and mobile phones? Do all external links work? Do all videos and audio recordings work?
- Badges or certificates: Do these appear correctly when a test user has completed the course?
Many of these issues may have been spotted already and so may not be applicable to your course. However, it is worth noting that the purpose of user testing is to get the course reviewed by someone from the perspective of a learner. Sometimes things that appear obvious to an author are not clear to a learner who is new to the course and perhaps also to online learning.
