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Each exhibitor has their own page on the site. At JUNO, we call these exhibitor engagement suites. These suites can be set up by the exhibitors themselves, with the help of our written tutorials and live training sessions.
Exhibitor suites include multiple ways for exhibitors to share information and connect with visitors. For example, they can add videos, images, text, downloadable resources, products, and sponsored sessions. Exhibitors and visitors can contact each other to start private one-on-one meetings and direct messaging conversations. And it’s all configurable so that the exhibitors can set up their suite to meet their needs! Learn more about exhibitor suite features.
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Course
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Courses allow your attendees to learners to walk through a series of guided lessons and participate in quizzes , formalized surveys, or continuing education (CE) credit tests. They are broken into two elements: Lessons and tracks.A single lesson is made up of questions. Question and surveys. They can follow their progress by looking at the percentage completed as they go.
Lessons are made up of multiple lesson parts (videos, questions, and text/HTML blurbs), which can be added and rearranged to create a dynamic lesson. Lesson question types include multiple choice, pollpolls, select many, fill in the blank, orderranking, and rating. You can also add images, videos, and text in between questions or at the beginning and end of a lesson. As a best practice, try to limit each lesson to no more than 15 questions. This helps attendees learners stay engaged!
Then, multiple lessons about a topic can be grouped to create a track. Tracks are useful when you want to guide attendees through a series of lessons in order. They’ll be able to follow their progress by looking at the percentage completed as they go. For additional control, you can even lock tracks until the previous track is completed, as well as prevent attendees from changing their answers once they complete a lesson.
Here's an example of how a full course is structured:
You have fifty questions that you want attendees to answer. First, you create a track with an introduction to the course. Then you create Lesson 1 and add the first ten questions. You create more lessons until all fifty questions are accounted for. Finally, you add all of the lessons to the track so that they’re published together as a single courseLearners enroll in courses before starting them and can be waitlisted if there isn’t enough space. Lessons can be graded or ungraded, and then averaged for the total course grade. Then learners pass or fail the course. If they pass, they get course credits.
See our course guides to learn more.
Blurbs and resources
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If you have unique content that doesn’t fall under one of the above content types or modules, we use blurbs and resources to add custom HTML code and images.
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