AI

Advanced beginner course

AI Video, Voice, and Presentation Tools

Plan scripts, voiceovers, captions, scenes, b-roll, slides, and review checks for practical video and presentation content.

Learning outcome

Plan scripts, voiceovers, captions, scenes, b-roll, slides, and review checks for practical video and presentation content.

Course project

Create a 30-second video plan and a five-slide presentation kit with script, scene list, voiceover text, captions, and safety review.

Safety rule

Do not paste passwords, payment data, private IDs, customer records, or illegal requests into AI tools.

Course syllabus

Learn, do, quiz, and save proof.

Module 1

Video and voice workflows

1Lesson 1: Short-video scriptsBuild scripts with hook, useful lesson, example, CTA, captions, and timing.Start lab

1. Learn

This lesson teaches one practical AI habit: Build scripts with hook, useful lesson, example, CTA, captions, and timing. You will apply it to a real script, storyboard, or presentation, compare the AI output with the goal, then save a reusable version only after review.

  1. 1Open CapCut or the closest approved tool for this task family.
  2. 2Paste the lab prompt, replace the bracketed parts with a real script, storyboard, or presentation, and answer any clarifying questions.
  3. 3Review the output for facts, missing context, privacy, risky claims, and whether it solves the original task.
  4. 4Improve one weak part, then save the prompt, final output, and review note as course evidence.

2. Study the example

Example: use CapCut to complete this task: Write three 20- to 35-second scripts for one audience. A strong result names the goal, gives enough context, asks for a specific format, marks assumptions, and includes a human review step before use.

Job seeker use

Use this skill to build safer job-search assets: tailored resumes, LinkedIn summaries, networking messages, company research notes, ethical interview preparation, and application tracking templates.

Student use

Use this skill for study plans, summaries, practice quizzes, class notes, project outlines, and revision checklists without submitting AI work as your own when your school rules prohibit it.

3. Proof to save

Short-video script pack.

Copy-ready lab prompt

You are helping me complete a practical AI-for-work task.

Task: [describe your real task]
Goal: Build scripts with hook, useful lesson, example, CTA, captions, and timing.
Tool I may use: CapCut, Descript, Runway, Canva, PowerPoint
Audience: [who will read or use the output]
Constraints: keep it accurate, private-data safe, and easy to review.

First ask up to 3 clarifying questions if needed. Then create the output in a clear structure. End with assumptions, risk checks, and a final checklist before I use the result.

Tools to try

CapCutDescriptRunwayCanvaPowerPoint

4. Quick quiz and checklist

Choose which script is too vague, too long, or risky.

  • Does the prompt include goal, context, audience, and output format?
  • Did you remove private, sensitive, payment, legal, medical, or account data?
  • Did you check facts, numbers, claims, tone, and missing assumptions?
  • Did you save the final prompt, output, and review notes as proof?

Common mistakes

  • Asking a one-line prompt with no audience, source, format, or success criteria.
  • Pasting private customer, payment, account, legal, medical, or employer-confidential information.
  • Using the AI answer without checking facts, numbers, tone, assumptions, and missing steps.

Passing answer key

A passing answer explains which tool you chose, why it fits the task, what context you gave it, how you checked the output, and what you changed before saving the final script, storyboard, or presentation.

Rubric

  • Clear task and audience: 25%
  • Useful prompt structure and tool choice: 25%
  • Human review, privacy, and safety checks: 25%
  • Reusable saved template or work sample: 25%
2Lesson 2: Voiceover and captionsCreate voiceover scripts and captions that are clear, accessible, and matched to the audience.Start lab

1. Learn

This lesson teaches one practical AI habit: Create voiceover scripts and captions that are clear, accessible, and matched to the audience. You will apply it to a real script, storyboard, or presentation, compare the AI output with the goal, then save a reusable version only after review.

  1. 1Open CapCut or the closest approved tool for this task family.
  2. 2Paste the lab prompt, replace the bracketed parts with a real script, storyboard, or presentation, and answer any clarifying questions.
  3. 3Review the output for facts, missing context, privacy, risky claims, and whether it solves the original task.
  4. 4Improve one weak part, then save the prompt, final output, and review note as course evidence.

2. Study the example

Example: use CapCut to complete this task: Turn a blog idea into voiceover, captions, and on-screen text. A strong result names the goal, gives enough context, asks for a specific format, marks assumptions, and includes a human review step before use.

Job seeker use

Use this skill to build safer job-search assets: tailored resumes, LinkedIn summaries, networking messages, company research notes, ethical interview preparation, and application tracking templates.

Student use

Use this skill for study plans, summaries, practice quizzes, class notes, project outlines, and revision checklists without submitting AI work as your own when your school rules prohibit it.

3. Proof to save

Voiceover and caption template.

Copy-ready lab prompt

You are helping me complete a practical AI-for-work task.

Task: [describe your real task]
Goal: Create voiceover scripts and captions that are clear, accessible, and matched to the audience.
Tool I may use: CapCut, Descript, Runway, Canva, PowerPoint
Audience: [who will read or use the output]
Constraints: keep it accurate, private-data safe, and easy to review.

First ask up to 3 clarifying questions if needed. Then create the output in a clear structure. End with assumptions, risk checks, and a final checklist before I use the result.

Tools to try

CapCutDescriptRunwayCanvaPowerPoint

4. Quick quiz and checklist

Pick the caption set with best clarity and timing.

  • Does the prompt include goal, context, audience, and output format?
  • Did you remove private, sensitive, payment, legal, medical, or account data?
  • Did you check facts, numbers, claims, tone, and missing assumptions?
  • Did you save the final prompt, output, and review notes as proof?

Common mistakes

  • Asking a one-line prompt with no audience, source, format, or success criteria.
  • Pasting private customer, payment, account, legal, medical, or employer-confidential information.
  • Using the AI answer without checking facts, numbers, tone, assumptions, and missing steps.

Passing answer key

A passing answer explains which tool you chose, why it fits the task, what context you gave it, how you checked the output, and what you changed before saving the final script, storyboard, or presentation.

Rubric

  • Clear task and audience: 25%
  • Useful prompt structure and tool choice: 25%
  • Human review, privacy, and safety checks: 25%
  • Reusable saved template or work sample: 25%
3Lesson 3: Presentation and demo workflowsUse AI to create slide outlines, speaker notes, demos, and review questions.Start lab

1. Learn

This lesson teaches one practical AI habit: Use AI to create slide outlines, speaker notes, demos, and review questions. You will apply it to a real script, storyboard, or presentation, compare the AI output with the goal, then save a reusable version only after review.

  1. 1Open CapCut or the closest approved tool for this task family.
  2. 2Paste the lab prompt, replace the bracketed parts with a real script, storyboard, or presentation, and answer any clarifying questions.
  3. 3Review the output for facts, missing context, privacy, risky claims, and whether it solves the original task.
  4. 4Improve one weak part, then save the prompt, final output, and review note as course evidence.

2. Study the example

Example: use CapCut to complete this task: Create a five-slide deck plan with presenter notes and audience questions. A strong result names the goal, gives enough context, asks for a specific format, marks assumptions, and includes a human review step before use.

Job seeker use

Use this skill to build safer job-search assets: tailored resumes, LinkedIn summaries, networking messages, company research notes, ethical interview preparation, and application tracking templates.

Student use

Use this skill for study plans, summaries, practice quizzes, class notes, project outlines, and revision checklists without submitting AI work as your own when your school rules prohibit it.

3. Proof to save

Presentation planning workflow.

Copy-ready lab prompt

You are helping me complete a practical AI-for-work task.

Task: [describe your real task]
Goal: Use AI to create slide outlines, speaker notes, demos, and review questions.
Tool I may use: CapCut, Descript, Runway, Canva, PowerPoint
Audience: [who will read or use the output]
Constraints: keep it accurate, private-data safe, and easy to review.

First ask up to 3 clarifying questions if needed. Then create the output in a clear structure. End with assumptions, risk checks, and a final checklist before I use the result.

Tools to try

CapCutDescriptRunwayCanvaPowerPoint

4. Quick quiz and checklist

Find the unsupported claim in a presentation draft.

  • Does the prompt include goal, context, audience, and output format?
  • Did you remove private, sensitive, payment, legal, medical, or account data?
  • Did you check facts, numbers, claims, tone, and missing assumptions?
  • Did you save the final prompt, output, and review notes as proof?

Common mistakes

  • Asking a one-line prompt with no audience, source, format, or success criteria.
  • Pasting private customer, payment, account, legal, medical, or employer-confidential information.
  • Using the AI answer without checking facts, numbers, tone, assumptions, and missing steps.

Passing answer key

A passing answer explains which tool you chose, why it fits the task, what context you gave it, how you checked the output, and what you changed before saving the final script, storyboard, or presentation.

Rubric

  • Clear task and audience: 25%
  • Useful prompt structure and tool choice: 25%
  • Human review, privacy, and safety checks: 25%
  • Reusable saved template or work sample: 25%
4Lesson 4: Storyboard and scene planningTurn a message into scenes, shots, captions, voiceover, and timing.Start lab

1. Learn

This lesson teaches one practical AI habit: Turn a message into scenes, shots, captions, voiceover, and timing. You will apply it to a real script, storyboard, or presentation, compare the AI output with the goal, then save a reusable version only after review.

  1. 1Open CapCut or the closest approved tool for this task family.
  2. 2Paste the lab prompt, replace the bracketed parts with a real script, storyboard, or presentation, and answer any clarifying questions.
  3. 3Review the output for facts, missing context, privacy, risky claims, and whether it solves the original task.
  4. 4Improve one weak part, then save the prompt, final output, and review note as course evidence.

2. Study the example

Example: use CapCut to complete this task: Create a storyboard for a 30-second vertical video and a 90-second explainer. A strong result names the goal, gives enough context, asks for a specific format, marks assumptions, and includes a human review step before use.

Job seeker use

Use this skill to build safer job-search assets: tailored resumes, LinkedIn summaries, networking messages, company research notes, ethical interview preparation, and application tracking templates.

Student use

Use this skill for study plans, summaries, practice quizzes, class notes, project outlines, and revision checklists without submitting AI work as your own when your school rules prohibit it.

3. Proof to save

Storyboard template.

Copy-ready lab prompt

You are helping me complete a practical AI-for-work task.

Task: [describe your real task]
Goal: Turn a message into scenes, shots, captions, voiceover, and timing.
Tool I may use: CapCut, Descript, Runway, Canva, PowerPoint
Audience: [who will read or use the output]
Constraints: keep it accurate, private-data safe, and easy to review.

First ask up to 3 clarifying questions if needed. Then create the output in a clear structure. End with assumptions, risk checks, and a final checklist before I use the result.

Tools to try

CapCutDescriptRunwayCanvaPowerPoint

4. Quick quiz and checklist

Find which scene list does not match the script.

  • Does the prompt include goal, context, audience, and output format?
  • Did you remove private, sensitive, payment, legal, medical, or account data?
  • Did you check facts, numbers, claims, tone, and missing assumptions?
  • Did you save the final prompt, output, and review notes as proof?

Common mistakes

  • Asking a one-line prompt with no audience, source, format, or success criteria.
  • Pasting private customer, payment, account, legal, medical, or employer-confidential information.
  • Using the AI answer without checking facts, numbers, tone, assumptions, and missing steps.

Passing answer key

A passing answer explains which tool you chose, why it fits the task, what context you gave it, how you checked the output, and what you changed before saving the final script, storyboard, or presentation.

Rubric

  • Clear task and audience: 25%
  • Useful prompt structure and tool choice: 25%
  • Human review, privacy, and safety checks: 25%
  • Reusable saved template or work sample: 25%
5Lesson 5: Presentation deck from source notesBuild slides from source material with clear claims, speaker notes, and audience questions.Start lab

1. Learn

This lesson teaches one practical AI habit: Build slides from source material with clear claims, speaker notes, and audience questions. You will apply it to a real script, storyboard, or presentation, compare the AI output with the goal, then save a reusable version only after review.

  1. 1Open CapCut or the closest approved tool for this task family.
  2. 2Paste the lab prompt, replace the bracketed parts with a real script, storyboard, or presentation, and answer any clarifying questions.
  3. 3Review the output for facts, missing context, privacy, risky claims, and whether it solves the original task.
  4. 4Improve one weak part, then save the prompt, final output, and review note as course evidence.

2. Study the example

Example: use CapCut to complete this task: Create a five-slide outline, talking points, and verification checklist. A strong result names the goal, gives enough context, asks for a specific format, marks assumptions, and includes a human review step before use.

Job seeker use

Use this skill to build safer job-search assets: tailored resumes, LinkedIn summaries, networking messages, company research notes, ethical interview preparation, and application tracking templates.

Student use

Use this skill for study plans, summaries, practice quizzes, class notes, project outlines, and revision checklists without submitting AI work as your own when your school rules prohibit it.

3. Proof to save

Presentation deck plan.

Copy-ready lab prompt

You are helping me complete a practical AI-for-work task.

Task: [describe your real task]
Goal: Build slides from source material with clear claims, speaker notes, and audience questions.
Tool I may use: CapCut, Descript, Runway, Canva, PowerPoint
Audience: [who will read or use the output]
Constraints: keep it accurate, private-data safe, and easy to review.

First ask up to 3 clarifying questions if needed. Then create the output in a clear structure. End with assumptions, risk checks, and a final checklist before I use the result.

Tools to try

CapCutDescriptRunwayCanvaPowerPoint

4. Quick quiz and checklist

Identify the slide claim that needs a source.

  • Does the prompt include goal, context, audience, and output format?
  • Did you remove private, sensitive, payment, legal, medical, or account data?
  • Did you check facts, numbers, claims, tone, and missing assumptions?
  • Did you save the final prompt, output, and review notes as proof?

Common mistakes

  • Asking a one-line prompt with no audience, source, format, or success criteria.
  • Pasting private customer, payment, account, legal, medical, or employer-confidential information.
  • Using the AI answer without checking facts, numbers, tone, assumptions, and missing steps.

Passing answer key

A passing answer explains which tool you chose, why it fits the task, what context you gave it, how you checked the output, and what you changed before saving the final script, storyboard, or presentation.

Rubric

  • Clear task and audience: 25%
  • Useful prompt structure and tool choice: 25%
  • Human review, privacy, and safety checks: 25%
  • Reusable saved template or work sample: 25%
6Lesson 6: Demo video and product walkthroughUse AI to plan a short demo that shows steps clearly without overselling.Start lab

1. Learn

This lesson teaches one practical AI habit: Use AI to plan a short demo that shows steps clearly without overselling. You will apply it to a real script, storyboard, or presentation, compare the AI output with the goal, then save a reusable version only after review.

  1. 1Open CapCut or the closest approved tool for this task family.
  2. 2Paste the lab prompt, replace the bracketed parts with a real script, storyboard, or presentation, and answer any clarifying questions.
  3. 3Review the output for facts, missing context, privacy, risky claims, and whether it solves the original task.
  4. 4Improve one weak part, then save the prompt, final output, and review note as course evidence.

2. Study the example

Example: use CapCut to complete this task: Write a product walkthrough script with screen actions, captions, and CTA. A strong result names the goal, gives enough context, asks for a specific format, marks assumptions, and includes a human review step before use.

Job seeker use

Use this skill to build safer job-search assets: tailored resumes, LinkedIn summaries, networking messages, company research notes, ethical interview preparation, and application tracking templates.

Student use

Use this skill for study plans, summaries, practice quizzes, class notes, project outlines, and revision checklists without submitting AI work as your own when your school rules prohibit it.

3. Proof to save

Demo video script.

Copy-ready lab prompt

You are helping me complete a practical AI-for-work task.

Task: [describe your real task]
Goal: Use AI to plan a short demo that shows steps clearly without overselling.
Tool I may use: CapCut, Descript, Runway, Canva, PowerPoint
Audience: [who will read or use the output]
Constraints: keep it accurate, private-data safe, and easy to review.

First ask up to 3 clarifying questions if needed. Then create the output in a clear structure. End with assumptions, risk checks, and a final checklist before I use the result.

Tools to try

CapCutDescriptRunwayCanvaPowerPoint

4. Quick quiz and checklist

Choose which demo promise is too broad or unsupported.

  • Does the prompt include goal, context, audience, and output format?
  • Did you remove private, sensitive, payment, legal, medical, or account data?
  • Did you check facts, numbers, claims, tone, and missing assumptions?
  • Did you save the final prompt, output, and review notes as proof?

Common mistakes

  • Asking a one-line prompt with no audience, source, format, or success criteria.
  • Pasting private customer, payment, account, legal, medical, or employer-confidential information.
  • Using the AI answer without checking facts, numbers, tone, assumptions, and missing steps.

Passing answer key

A passing answer explains which tool you chose, why it fits the task, what context you gave it, how you checked the output, and what you changed before saving the final script, storyboard, or presentation.

Rubric

  • Clear task and audience: 25%
  • Useful prompt structure and tool choice: 25%
  • Human review, privacy, and safety checks: 25%
  • Reusable saved template or work sample: 25%
7Lesson 7: Accessibility and publishing reviewCheck captions, contrast, reading speed, audio clarity, and platform export settings.Start lab

1. Learn

This lesson teaches one practical AI habit: Check captions, contrast, reading speed, audio clarity, and platform export settings. You will apply it to a real script, storyboard, or presentation, compare the AI output with the goal, then save a reusable version only after review.

  1. 1Open CapCut or the closest approved tool for this task family.
  2. 2Paste the lab prompt, replace the bracketed parts with a real script, storyboard, or presentation, and answer any clarifying questions.
  3. 3Review the output for facts, missing context, privacy, risky claims, and whether it solves the original task.
  4. 4Improve one weak part, then save the prompt, final output, and review note as course evidence.

2. Study the example

Example: use CapCut to complete this task: Create a publishing checklist for Shorts, Reels, YouTube, LinkedIn, and presentations. A strong result names the goal, gives enough context, asks for a specific format, marks assumptions, and includes a human review step before use.

Job seeker use

Use this skill to build safer job-search assets: tailored resumes, LinkedIn summaries, networking messages, company research notes, ethical interview preparation, and application tracking templates.

Student use

Use this skill for study plans, summaries, practice quizzes, class notes, project outlines, and revision checklists without submitting AI work as your own when your school rules prohibit it.

3. Proof to save

Video accessibility checklist.

Copy-ready lab prompt

You are helping me complete a practical AI-for-work task.

Task: [describe your real task]
Goal: Check captions, contrast, reading speed, audio clarity, and platform export settings.
Tool I may use: CapCut, Descript, Runway, Canva, PowerPoint
Audience: [who will read or use the output]
Constraints: keep it accurate, private-data safe, and easy to review.

First ask up to 3 clarifying questions if needed. Then create the output in a clear structure. End with assumptions, risk checks, and a final checklist before I use the result.

Tools to try

CapCutDescriptRunwayCanvaPowerPoint

4. Quick quiz and checklist

Find which video is not accessible enough to publish.

  • Does the prompt include goal, context, audience, and output format?
  • Did you remove private, sensitive, payment, legal, medical, or account data?
  • Did you check facts, numbers, claims, tone, and missing assumptions?
  • Did you save the final prompt, output, and review notes as proof?

Common mistakes

  • Asking a one-line prompt with no audience, source, format, or success criteria.
  • Pasting private customer, payment, account, legal, medical, or employer-confidential information.
  • Using the AI answer without checking facts, numbers, tone, assumptions, and missing steps.

Passing answer key

A passing answer explains which tool you chose, why it fits the task, what context you gave it, how you checked the output, and what you changed before saving the final script, storyboard, or presentation.

Rubric

  • Clear task and audience: 25%
  • Useful prompt structure and tool choice: 25%
  • Human review, privacy, and safety checks: 25%
  • Reusable saved template or work sample: 25%

Certificate evidence

This course contributes to your AI work portfolio.

Finish the lessons, save your prompts and outputs, then use the capstone checklist to show what AI did, what you reviewed, and where human judgment was required.