After reading this article, you’ll know what SCORM is and how to turn a simple PowerPoint presentation into a SCORM course and upload it into a learning management system.
SCORM means Shareable Content Object Reference Model. It is an international standard for e-courses. If your course is published in the SCORM format, you can be sure that almost any learning management system (LMS) will recognize it.
Also read: The Top 9 Learning Management System Features Each LMS Must Have in 2023
In fact, SCORM is a list of technical requirements. This list tells us how to make a course that will work on any platform – there’s a detailed description of the e-course structure and the principles of its interaction with LMSs.
There are actually quite a few benefits that you might not have expected:
Now that you have an idea of what SCORM is and how it works, let’s look at what benefits it provides. There are actually quite a few that you might not have expected:
There are three existing versions of SCORM: 1.1, 1.2, and 2004. Each version has its own technical features and advantages. However, SCORM 1.1, which was the first version, is not widely adopted, so we’ll go straight to those that are used extensively:
SCORM 1.2 indicates the student’s progress in the report, that is, how much of the course the learner has studied. For instance, “The learner has studied 70% of the course.” If the learner has studied the entire course, the system will display the “Completed” status.
SCORM 2004 provides more detailed information. In addition to the progress and the status, it shows how many points the learner scored upon completing the course and passing the test.
SCORM 1.2 vs. SCORM 2004: Which One Is Better →
If you already have a SCORM conformant LMS, the main thing you need to know when creating an e-course is which SCORM version your LMS supports.
A SCORM package that can also be referred to as a SCORM course or a SCORM module is a ZIP file that contains specific contents defined by the SCORM standard. It is known as a Package Interchange File (PIF) and has all the data needed to transfer learning content to an LMS.
Here are the contents every SCORM package should include:
You can find a detailed description of the SCORM content packaging specification on the website of Rustici Software, the world’s leading eLearning standards expert.
In the past, only professional programmers could develop SCORM courses. Nowadays, everyone can create them using SCORM authoring tools.
Creating such courses is easy with the iSpring Suite authoring tool, which works as a PowerPoint add-in. After installation, all the capabilities of iSpring Suite will be available in a special PowerPoint tab. That means you can turn your presentation into an e-course right in PowerPoint.
How to create a SCORM course with iSpring Suite
It’ll take only a few minutes to make a professional educational course out of a common PPT presentation. Here’s how:
With iSpring Suite, you can also create an eLearning course from scratch. Simply fill the slides with text, images, and videos, or use one of the ready-made templates to put a professional-looking course together in a matter of minutes, and then publish it to SCORM. You can also enhance your courses with interactive quizzes, video lectures, and role-play simulations.
How to add a SCORM course to an LMS
After publishing, you’ll have a ZIP file that you need to upload to an LMS. Check out the articles in the list below to learn how to import courses into popular LMSs like:
… or take a look at the complete list.
The only thing left to do is share the course with your learners. If you use iSpring Learn LMS, you can send out invitations by email. Specify one or more emails, and the recipients will get access to the course instantly.
You can run a SCORM package in one of two ways.
What we call a SCORM package is, in fact, web content that can communicate with an LMS using the SCORM API. You can’t edit or reverse-engineer a published course; however, most SCORM courses are created with authoring tools like iSpring Suite and, as mentioned above, use source (project) files that contain all the contents, including text, images, videos, etc. If you have a project file, you can open it right in the authoring tool, make the necessary changes, and publish the course to SCORM.
Even though SCORM is a quite dated technology, it still dominates the eLearning market. SCORM 1.2 and SCORM 2004 have become the most popular technology standards. According to a Software Advice survey, 62% of businesses use SCORM courses for training in their LMS.
However, some experts believe that other eLearning standards will become more dominant in the future. More recently, the evolution of SCORM has generated the Tin Can (Experience API) and сmi5 formats. These formats feature a wide range of capabilities: they allow your learners to study offline and/or use mobile devices, support PDF documents and interactive simulations, collect detailed statistics about learners’ progress, and much more.
Here, you’ll find answers to some frequently asked questions about SCORM, and we’ll update this blog post with any new ones you might ask in the comments.
SCORM compliance means adherence to the industry standard for communication between eLearning content and LMSs. Simply put, using any SCORM-compliant authoring tool means you can create a SCORM-compliant course and then publish it to any SCORM-compliant LMS. The course will play on a multitude of platforms without requiring any adjustments, and you’ll be able to track your learners’ activity and results.
A SCORM wrapper is a set of files that make it possible for a learning management system and your eLearning content to communicate with each other. You can apply a SCORM wrapper to nearly any form of training content, and then upload it to an LMS for immediate learner access.
To get a detailed overview, read our post about SCORM wrappers.
If you have a SCORM package and are not sure what version of SCORM it was published in, you can figure it out by looking in the imsmanifest.xml file in the root directory of the course. Unzip the SCORM package, find the imsmanifest.xml file, and open it with either TextEdit (Mac) or Notepad (Windows). You need to find the metadata tags <schemaversion></schemaversion> and see what’s between them.
To make sure that your SCORM package can be played in an LMS and properly report course completion status and learner results, you need to use a SCORM player that can display your content and show you how it communicates with the SCORM API. Check out this article on SCORM testing for more details.
If you have some legacy learning content that you want to turn into full-fledged SCORM courses, take a look at the following posts: