Melissa Fisher is a course creator. She often needs to organize course outlines, lecture notes, article materials and lecture scripts into slides.
For Melissa, the most difficult thing is not to write the content, but to break the content into a suitable rhythm for telling: where needs to be foreshadowed, where to give examples, where to separate pages, and where to not allow students to see too much information at once.
Deckwise helped her start with the course outline and notes, first generate an outline, and then generate editable slides. After the first version comes out, she can continue to ask AI to help her break down pages, add examples, and adjust the rhythm to make the entire set of slides more suitable for lesson preparation, recording, and sharing.
Course content cannot just be uploaded with notes
When Melissa gives a course, she usually already has a lot of content in hand: outlines, lecture notes, articles, cases, knowledge points, and exercises.
But these contents cannot be copied directly to slides. Students need to understand step by step, and the pages need to be rhythmic: one point is discussed on one page, complex content needs to be broken down, and key concepts need to be reinforced repeatedly.
In the past, Melissa often went back and forth between "too much content" and "page space."
Now, she will put the course outline and notes into Deckwise first, and let Mr. AI generate an outline. She can first see whether the course sequence is natural, and then decide where examples are needed and which knowledge points need to be split into multiple pages.
She can make AI adjust:
- Break this chapter into more sections
- Add an example to the core concept
- Change long paragraphs of content into lecture rhythm
- Add page recap
- Add a takeaway at the end of each lesson
After the structure is confirmed, Deckwise will generate complete slides.
From lesson preparation to lesson recording, the pace is smoother
Course slides are different from ordinary presentations.
It is not just for people to read, but also to cooperate with the teacher to tell it. If it is too dense, students will not be able to keep up; if it is too scattered, the course will have no information content.
Deckwise Help Melissa pace her story faster. After the first version is generated, she can continue to let AI modify the same deck:
- Split this page into two pages
- Add a transition page
- Make this concept more popular
- Add a class question here
- Condensed the entire lesson into a 20-minute version
In this way, she does not have to make a new slides, but can continue to polish the original course structure.
What matters most to Melissa
What Melissa values most is that Deckwise helps her turn content into a "tellable structure."
The course does not pile information onto the page, but takes students step by step to understand. Deckwise allows her to quickly get a version of the course slides first, and then continue to adjust the rhythm, add examples, and rewrite expressions.
This allows course preparation to no longer start from a blank page, but from a course framework that can be continuously modified.
