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ReX Smart Template | Simulation: Practice Your Role_Good Better Best | Use Cases and Benefits

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📝 What is the "Practice Your Role" Good Better Best (GBB) Simulation Template?

This template offers a structured, feedback-rich learning experience designed for 30–45 minutes of active, in-platform engagement. Tailored to each learner’s role, it helps them practice applying their skills in realistic, familiar scenarios. Each round presents three response options—Good, Better, and Best—aligned to a scoring model that delivers targeted, meaningful feedback. The scenario design and feedback encourage reflection and skill growth directly tied to real-world responsibilities.

🎯 When Might I Want to Use the "Practice Your Role" template?

  • Build real-world judgment — Practice decision-making and communication in complex, role-specific scenarios with no clear right answers.

  • Strengthen everyday performance — Tackle the nuanced challenges your learners face regularly, from objections to prioritization.

  • Develop leadership & soft skills — Grow feedback, empathy, accountability, and conflict resolution through action and reflection.

  • Prepare for critical moments — Support readiness for launches, restructures, or high-stakes conversations in your learner’s actual role.

  • Keep engagement high — Use a structured, multimedia experience to balance decisions with feedback and reflection across three rounds.


DEMO PROJECTS: See What's Possible

✨ Explore What’s Possible with the "Practice Your Role" Simulation Good-Better-Best Template. Check out two fully built demo projects—complete with access links—to see how this template can be customized for your learners. Dive in and try them out for yourself!

Click the button to access the demos as a learner!

Project Management for Mid-Level Leaders

Coming Soon!

Retail Sales Practice for Entry Level

8 Steps To Effectively Handle Workplace Conflict

Coming Soon!


High Level Design (HLD) + Learner Experience Flow

This template is ideal for role-specific skill practice through immersive, decision-based learning. Across three rounds, learners face real-world challenges with increasing complexity, using a Good-Better-Best model to build judgment and reflect on their choices.

  • Sharpen real-world skills

  • Deepen role mastery

  • Grow leadership

  • Boost readiness

  • Build soft skills


Design Rationale for the Template

This Good-Better-Best Simulation is designed using principles of decision-based learning and situational judgment, where learners navigate complex scenarios without a single "correct" answer. The template leverages:

  • Branching conversations to model interpersonal nuance and consequences

  • Tradeoffs and list builders to simulate prioritization and competing demands

  • Curveball moments to introduce uncertainty, requiring learners to adapt their plans or respond on the spot to high-pressure situations

It’s grounded in experiential learning theory, with elements of action, reflection, and feedback to deepen learning. The good-better-best model emphasizes growth over perfection, reducing performance anxiety and encouraging judgment-based reasoning.

💡 Common use cases for the "Practice Your Role" Simulation GBB Template:

  • Leadership development

  • Cross-functional collaboration

  • Client or stakeholder engagement

  • Ethical decision-making

  • Change management scenarios


Learning Strategy Behind This Template

Ideal for skill-building and behavior change training, this "Practice Your Role" Simulation GBB Template experience unfolds across three rounds and emphasizes emotional nuance, prioritization, and real-world application.

  • Welcome + Resource Setup:
    Sets context and introduces key characters and challenges to immerse the learner immediately.

  • Three-Round Simulation (Good-Better-Best Format):
    Each round increases in complexity, simulating evolving workplace dynamics and pressure. Learners make choices, navigate curveballs, and respond to tradeoffs—reinforcing decision-making in realistic contexts.

  • Dynamic Activity Types:
    Includes branching conversations, tradeoffs, list builders, curveballs, and video scenarios to simulate a wide range of leadership challenges and emotional responses.

  • Embedded Reflections:
    Learners pause throughout the experience to reflect on priorities, justify their thinking, and adapt strategies—mirroring real-world leadership growth moments. Check the FAQ for specifics on reflection points.

  • Scoring & Feedback Model:
    Each activity is mapped to a key feedback metric (e.g., Strategic Thinking, Empathy, Decision Quality), with choices scored as Good, Better, or Best. This supports growth, not perfection, and offers targeted insights on performance.

  • Post-Simulation Reflection & Feedback:
    A final synthesis activity prompts learners to internalize lessons and identify future behavior shifts.

Together, these elements create a robust, immersive, and growth-oriented simulation where learners explore complex challenges and decision-making in action.

💡 Use ReX to Streamline Your Project Discovery

Explore the "Practice Your Role" Simulation GBB prerequisite questions to quickly align on learner needs, storyline clarity, and scoring metrics—so you can build with confidence from the start!

Click the arrow to review the discovery questions that will set your project up for success.

Prerequisites Overview

Before building a simulation in this template, authors complete three prerequisite sections that serve as the foundation for learner relevance, storyline clarity, and scoring alignment. These prereqs ensure the experience is grounded in real-world context, tightly aligned to learning outcomes, and fully leverages the good-better-best scoring model.

The Learner

Authors define the learner’s world to make the simulation relevant and realistic.

Key Questions Answered:

  • Who is your target learner?

  • How would you describe the learner’s background and experience level?

  • What type of company does the learner work for, and in which industry?

  • How would you describe the organizational culture the learner operates in?

  • What are the learner's challenges?

  • What key skills, knowledge, or behaviors should the learner develop through this experience?

Outputs:

  • A clear learner persona and context

  • Selected mindset shifts the experience will promote

  • Identified learner tradeoffs (e.g., speed vs. quality, individual vs. team outcomes) that will be woven into scenarios

Why it matters: This step grounds the simulation in the learner’s reality, enabling believable tradeoffs

Learning Objectives, Skills, & Metrics

This prereq sets the learning foundation that drives all activity design and feedback.

What’s Determined:

  • Identified learning objectives

  • Defined skills or competencies to be developed

  • Selected feedback metrics that will be tracked across the simulation (e.g., Strategic Thinking, Stakeholder Alignment)

Why it matters: Each activity is scored using a good-better-best model and mapped to one of these metrics, so this upfront clarity is essential to meaningful feedback and outcome measurement.

Simulation Storyline

Authors build a storyline that will evolve across three rounds of decision-making.

Key Questions Answered:

  • What is the main challenge the learner will face in the simulation?

Outputs:

  • The storyline challenge and how it unfolds in rounds 1, 2 and 3

  • Key characters and their perspectives

Why it matters: This ensures the narrative stays consistent, immersive, and purposeful—building on the learner profile and reinforcing the skills and metrics defined earlier.


Flow and Activity Structure

Each round represents a stage in a larger, unfolding storyline. Activities are carefully chosen to build on each other, with every round including a moment of reflection to reinforce feedback loops and help learners internalize key takeaways.

Round 1 – Orientation and Initial Strategy

  • Resources and Welcome – Introduce key players and context

  • Course of Action + Branching Conversation – Make low-risk decisions to explore initial thinking

  • Tradeoff Reflection – Reevaluate priorities in a new situation

  • Scenario with Team Perspectives – Begin weighing diverse inputs and viewpoints

Round 2 – Rising Complexity and External Pressure

  • Course of Action – Choose a direction under increasing complexity

  • Curveball – Respond to an unexpected disruption

  • Scenario + Decision Rationale – Justify your choices based on shifting priorities

  • List Builder – Tackle a prioritization or evaluation challenge under pressure

Round 3 – Final Decisions Under Pressure

  • Scenario – Navigate continued challenges in a new context

  • Video Branching – Engage with rich media to capture emotional nuance

  • Urgent Curveball Email – Respond to a time-sensitive demand

  • List Builder – Make final evaluation / decisions

  • End of Learning Reflection – Synthesize insights and clarify key takeaways

💡 Can I Add or Modify Activities Within the Rounds?

Yes! While each round includes a core set of recommended activities, you’re welcome to add more to enhance the experience. Just be sure that the new activities you choose correspond with the correct round—this ensures they align with the round’s purpose, storyline progression, and level of complexity.

Check the FAQ for a list of approved activity types by round.


Scoring Approach

This template uses a Good-Better-Best scoring model to promote growth, judgment-based reasoning, and real-world decision-making. Rather than focusing on binary right-or-wrong choices, this model reflects the complexity of workplace scenarios where multiple responses may be valid—but not equally effective.

Key benefits of this scoring approach:

  • Reinforces growth mindset by recognizing a range of acceptable decisions

  • Promotes critical thinking and personal accountability

  • Encourages reflection through nuanced, behavior-based feedback

  • Aligns with Studio scoring tools for seamless authoring and metric tracking

Each activity includes (exported in this order to SimGate Studio):

  • Good = Acceptable, safe choice

  • Better = Thoughtful, context-aware choice

  • Best = Strategic, well-rounded, and aligned with broader outcomes

Each activity is mapped to a feedback metric (e.g., Strategic Thinking, Stakeholder Alignment, Execution Effectiveness), selected during pre-work. This helps learners track their performance across key skill areas and see where to focus their development.

💡 Note! After exporting your project to Studio, be sure to complete your scoring model by adding scores and linking your metric variables to the learner feedback pages. You can also enhance your project with additional page templates that match your exported theme. To streamline this process, the ReX Simulation GBB Shared Library includes ready-made templates you can easily insert into your wireflow.


FAQ

How does an author know if they are completing the prompts correctly?

  • About Prerequisite Prompts:
    Prerequisite prompts are designed to gather accurate and necessary information from the author to support the development of the learning experience. While the content entered in these prompts does not directly appear in the final learning experience, it plays a critical role in shaping and informing the content.

  • Ensuring Accuracy and Alignment:
    Prerequisite prompts often include overviews or checklists to help authors align their input with the intended learning goals. Authors are encouraged to review and edit their responses to ensure ReX has the correct context to create an effective learning experience.

  • Exploring Options:
    Authors can always adjust their inputs and regenerate the steps to see different outputs based on revised choices. This flexibility allows for iterative improvements and tailored results.

What activity types can I add or change within the rounds in ReX (before export to Studio)?

Add additional activities to enhance the experience. Just be sure that the new activities you choose correspond with the correct round (to ensure storyline alignment, intended purpose and complexity level of the round)

Here are the additional activity types available by round:

Round 1:

  • Round 1 List Builder

  • Round 1 Video Branching Response

Round 2:

  • Round 2 Conversation

  • Round 2 Video Branching Response

Round 3:

  • Round 3 Course of Action

  • Round 3 Conversation

What Studio Library does this Template Set align with?

If you want to use a page styled for the Simulation: Practice Your Role | Good, Better, Best template, search the library for ReX (Simulation Good, Better, Best Practice Your Role). This library contains pages specifically designed for this type of learning experience.

What are the reflection points for the Learner within the learning experience?

There are several opportunities for learner reflection built into the Learning Experience:

  • Round 1 includes a reflection during the Course of Action (COA) activity. This reflection isn’t created in ReX—it is include in the COA activity in Studio (sliders) and can be edited after import.

  • Also in Round 1, there’s an unscored tradeoff reflection activity. It presents a scenario with competing demands and asks the learner to reflect on what they might do differently.

  • In Round 2, a decision rationale prompt appears after the Scenario activity, encouraging the learner to reflect on their reasoning.

  • In Round 3, there is an end-of-round reflection, which will appear after importing to Studio.

You can always add decision rationale to any activity in ReX or additional reflection points after importing into Studio, depending on your learning goals.



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