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SlideWiki is an open web-based OpenCourseWare authoring system. It supports learning content authoring and management (including
SCORM Shareable Content Object Reference Model (SCORM) is a collection of standards and specifications for web-based electronic educational technology (also called e-learning). It defines communications between client side content and a host system (cal ...
2004 compliance) and tools for
collaboration Collaboration (from Latin ''com-'' "with" + ''laborare'' "to labor", "to work") is the process of two or more people, entities or organizations working together to complete a task or achieve a goal. Collaboration is similar to cooperation. Most ...
/
crowd-sourcing Crowdsourcing involves a large group of dispersed participants contributing or producing goods or services—including ideas, votes, micro-tasks, and finances—for payment or as volunteers. Contemporary crowdsourcing often involves digit ...
,
translation Translation is the communication of the Meaning (linguistic), meaning of a #Source and target languages, source-language text by means of an Dynamic and formal equivalence, equivalent #Source and target languages, target-language text. The ...
, communication, evaluation and assessment, supporting the publication of
open educational resources Open educational resources (OER) are teaching, learning, and research materials intentionally created and licensed to be free for the end user to own, share, and in most cases, modify. The term "OER" describes publicly accessible materials and ...
Moundridou M., Zalavra E., Papanikolaou K., Tripiniotis A. (2020) Collaborative Content Authoring: Developing WebQuests Using SlideWiki. In: Auer M., Tsiatsos T. (eds) The Challenges of the Digital Transformation in Education. ICL 2018. Advances in Intelligent Systems and Computing, vol 916. Springer, Cham https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-030-11932-4_21


Concept

SlideWiki is a Web application facilitating the collaboration around educational content. With SlideWiki users can create and collaborate on slides and arrange slides in presentations. Presentations can be organized hierarchically, so as to structure them reasonably according to their content. Currently large-scale collaboration (also referred to as crowd-sourcing) around educational content (other than texts) is supported only in a very limited way. Slides, presentations, diagrams, assessment tests etc. are mainly created by tutors, teachers, lecturers and professors individually or in very small groups. The resulting content can be shared online (e.g. using Slideshare, OpenStudy, Google Docs). However, proper community collaboration, authoring, versioning, branching, reuse and re-purposing of educational content similarly as we know it from the open-source software community is currently not supported. SlideWiki is a platform, where potentially large communities of teachers, lecturers, academics are empowered to create sophisticated educational content in a collaborative way. For newly emerging research fields, for example, a collaboration facility such as SlideWiki allows disseminating content and educating PhD students and peer-researchers more rapidly, since the burden of creating and structuring the new field can be distributed among a large community. Specialists for individual aspects of the new field can focus on creating educational content in their particular area of expertise and still this content can be easily integrated with other content, re-structured and re-purposed. A particular aspect, which is facilitated by SlideWiki is multi-linguality. Since all content is versioned and richly structured, it is easy to semi-automatically translate content and to keep track of changes in various multi-lingual versions of the same content object.


Features

SlideWiki particularly focusses on the crowd-sourced authoring, translation support and enrichment of educational content with self-assessment questions. Features include: * WYSIWYG slide authoring * Logical slide and deck representation * LaTeX/MathML integration * Multilingual decks / semi-automatic translation in 50+ languages * PowerPoint/HTML import * Source code highlighting within slides * Dynamic CSS themability and transitions * Social networking activities * Full revisioning and branching of slides and decks * E-Learning with self-assessment questionnaires * Source, citation and attribution tracking * Synchronization and remote control of presentations


SlideWiki H2020 project

SlideWikis future development has been established with the beginning of the year 2016 as an EU funded project. It was reengineered on a new technology stack and released on the official SlideWiki.org platform in 2017. 17 partner institutes from all over Europe and also South America cooperate in order to improve SlideWiki and implement many new features and enhance the user experience in order to become a central hub for open educational resources, especially presentations.


References


External links

; Official Site
SlideWiki.org
- Official SlideWiki site ; Bibliography * Darya Tarasowa, Ali Khalili, Sören Auer and Jörg Unbehauen
CrowdLearn: Crowd-sourcing the Creation of Highly-structured E-Learning Content.
5th International Conference on Computer Supported Education (CSEDU 2013) * Ali Khalili, Sören Auer, Darya Tarasowa and Ivan Ermilov
SlideWiki: Elicitation and Sharing of Corporate Knowledge using Presentations.
Proceedings of the EKAW 2012, LNCS 7603, Springer 2012, {{ISBN, 978-3-642-33875-5. Learning management systems Virtual learning environments Assistive technology Educational software OpenCourseWare Free learning support software