-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 106
New issue
Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.
By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.
Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account
Add Facilitator Notes #2927
Add Facilitator Notes #2927
Conversation
ffafa51
to
eb899e9
Compare
The flow looks good to me. I'd love to hear @jonathanbossenger and @kathrynwp's thoughts. I would also like to see if we can test this view with actual use cases. This post was shared before as an example of how long content could be, but it's vital to identify whether that page is an exception or not. It would be frustrating to have a long modal, but also a poor user experience needing to open an external link to see short content that could perfectly fit into a modal. |
No further discussion that I'm aware of. I'm imagining a new post meta field on a Lesson for selecting a Lesson Plan. The content from that Lesson Plan is rendered in the modal. |
There was a problem hiding this comment.
Choose a reason for hiding this comment
The reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more.
We'll need to apply these changes to patterns/sensei-lesson-standalone.php
too
} | ||
} | ||
|
||
.wporg-learn-facilitator-notes-content { |
There was a problem hiding this comment.
Choose a reason for hiding this comment
The reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more.
I notice that the modal content overflow is hidden. Some of the Lesson Plan content is very long so this will need to be scrollable on desktop as well as mobile.
There was a problem hiding this comment.
Choose a reason for hiding this comment
The reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more.
Thanks. c125bcb
|
||
?> | ||
|
||
<input type="checkbox" id="wporg-learn-facilitator-notes-toggle"> |
There was a problem hiding this comment.
Choose a reason for hiding this comment
The reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more.
Need to consider the accessibility of this control and the modal content. At present this input isn't focusable with keyboard. We may want to move focus to the close button after activation. I'd consult some modal best practice docs.
On mobile it is definitely following a modal pattern, where focus should be trapped within the modal, and background page elements should not be interactive. On desktop it's arguable that the rest of the UI should remain interactive, as it's more of a panel.
@ryelle any thoughts on this?
There was a problem hiding this comment.
Choose a reason for hiding this comment
The reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more.
Also I expected this pattern would use a button element, hooked up to the interactivity API to control the modal visibility, however I'm not sure whether this input based approach is any less accessible. Might need more aria attributes though as I think it's a less typical pattern.
There was a problem hiding this comment.
Choose a reason for hiding this comment
The reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more.
I expected this pattern would use a button element,
I think a button (with aria-expanded
and aria-controls
attributes) would be better. Right now this would read as checking a checkbox, with no way to know that it would reveal more content.
On mobile it is definitely following a modal pattern, where focus should be trapped within the modal, and background page elements should not be interactive. On desktop it's arguable that the rest of the UI should remain interactive, as it's more of a panel.
If it's easier, you can make it a modal (with focus trapping) in both cases - and if someone clicks outside the panel to use the rest of the site, close the panel. Otherwise, on desktop, I would expect it to close when I tab through everything, and focus moves on to the next tab stop (from the screenshots, I assume that's "exit course"). The desktop global nav submenus work like this— if you open "Community" & start tabbing, the submenu closes when "About" is focused.
left: 4%; | ||
width: 92%; | ||
height: 90vh; | ||
border: 1px solid var(--sensei-course-progress-bar-color); |
There was a problem hiding this comment.
Choose a reason for hiding this comment
The reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more.
There was a problem hiding this comment.
Choose a reason for hiding this comment
The reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more.
Nice start! Visually the UI is working well. I've left some comments about accessibility concerns.
If we want to load the content from a linked Lesson Plan I guess we'll need a block with conditional rendering to handle the Lesson Plan being defined or erroring, etc.
I understand your concerns. I've selected a sampling of current lesson plans from the lesson plan landing page Everything up to the "Example Lesson" section would need to be displayed in the lesson notes module, and as you can see in all three examples, even the shortest one (Upload a theme) is pretty detailed. |
Thanks @jonathanbossenger for adding more examples. I think we should revisit this decision and, instead of showing the content in a modal, make the "Facilitator notes" link to open a new page. Although the practice is not recommended (G200), I would suggest opening a new tab. Filling out forms or (quote) "prevent the loss of any form data that has already been entered" are use cases excluded from this requirement. What do you think of this? Perhaps @ryelle knows more about it. |
Is there progress that a user can loose? Lessons are mostly articles, as I recall from past testing. Clicking a link and then using the back button wouldn't cause "lose of data" when reading an article. Would this show up on a quiz, or are there many interactive lessons? If there are, and this would be a "lose of data" case, the G200 technique also recommends giving advance warning that this will be a new tab (typically this is done with the Otherwise, I think it would be fine to keep it as a new page and let users open it as they choose. |
f93307d
to
16d2c39
Compare
I originally thought of keeping it simple and achieving it with CSS. If the content can't be retrieved, it could be handled within the pattern and display the corresponding notice/warning. That said, the requirements have changed now, I'll think about how to make adjustments for a better approach. |
I don't believe there is any state to lose, and Lessons Plans don't relate to any quizzes afaik. I feel like a new tab/window seems like a good approach, with sufficient warning, so that the plan can be referenced alongside the lesson. That seems to be the intention. |
This front-end implementation of a new tab would work. The team's request is more around the back-end implementation. quoting #2392 (comment)
Would this still be possible? |
Thanks for reminding us of that requirement. While I'm not sure it will help streamline translation work (that might depend on which translation plugin we choose and how well it plays with custom fields), the ease of editing in one place is not to be overlooked. I'm not sure how well a custom fields approach will handle content of this scale either. This seems to be the main challenge for both frontend and backend. Might need some testing. A custom Facilitators Notes block within the post editor might be worth trying too. Both these approaches will very likely require manual migration I expect. |
The team will be fine with that 👍 I believe we expected that would be the case. |
Closed in favor of #3052 |
Resolves #2869
This PR introduces the UI for Facilitator Notes, including updates for mobile view. Additionally, the Breadcrumbs section has been changed from "Home" to "Learn WordPress."
Screencast
facilitator.mp4
Lesson Plan Migration
From the discussion at #2392, it appears that before migrating Lesson Plans to Facilitator Notes, it needs to map each Lesson Plan to the most appropriate lesson. Has there been any related discussion?