Difference between revisions of "CLIO Guides"

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==Overview==
==Overview==
Non-profit and cultural heritage professionals often wear many hats and balance numerous responsibilities. Some are educators, some are designers, and some are developers. Many professionals are more than one. In order to help you make sense of the documentation, we've broken them down into guides for different needs.
Non-profit and cultural heritage professionals often wear many hats and balance numerous responsibilities. Some are educators, some are designers, and some are developers. Many professionals are more than one. In order to help you make sense of the documentation, we've broken them down into guides for different needs.

Revision as of 18:13, 6 May 2022

Overview

Non-profit and cultural heritage professionals often wear many hats and balance numerous responsibilities. Some are educators, some are designers, and some are developers. Many professionals are more than one. In order to help you make sense of the documentation, we've broken them down into guides for different needs.

Institutional Guides

Administrator

Administrators manage CLIO Interactives and provide a decisive cohesion to the project by defining Audiences, organizing Programs and choosing what information is made available to Facilitators.

Educator

Educators create the language and select the media that go into the activities for their audience.

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Facilitator

Facilitators set up CLIO kiosks and get them working as part of an exhibit.

Designer

Designers alter the look and feel of the CLIO application to better integrate it into your institution's design aesthetic and corporate branding.

Read more.png

Developer

Developers code the CLIO activities, create or modify activity types, and provide insights into technology integration.