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The One Laptop per Child project (OLPC) is looking for quality educational content and learning software to spread to children around the world. Some of these tools and materials will be included on the laptops, some will be made available on local school servers, and some will be made available online.
How to get involved
- To learn more about developing educational content and learning tools for OLPC, join one of our mailing lists. (The library and devel lists are good places to start.)
- To suggest an idea for educational content or learning tools that should be included on the laptops, contribute your idea directly on the educational content ideas page, the software ideas page, or the hardware ideas page.
- To submit your material to OLPC for review, complete a request for content form, a software project application, or a grassroots learning initiative proposal
- If you are a developer or a creator who expects to need to test things directly on an XO, you can run an emulator on your own computer or apply to our developers program.
History: a call for content ideas
OLPC is extending a call for content creators, publishers, and archivists to suggest educational material for inclusion in our digital library network. We are particularly interested in materials that are produced specially for children and teachers; designed for ease of localization, customization, and other reuse; available in many languages; and available under a free content license. Materials can include the following.
- Texts – stories and poems; textbooks, workbooks, how-tos and lab manuals;
- Reference works – encyclopedias, dictionaries, maps and atlases;
- Images – symbols and fonts, blueprints, sketches, photographs and art;
- Multimedia content – animations, audio books, songs and audio recordings, videos;
- Software – games, tools, scripts, simulations, self-assessments and interactive tools
All material installed on the laptops will be available under a free license, such as the GNU General Public License or the Creative Commons Attribution or Attribution/Share-alike licenses (The Creative Commons No-derivatives and Non-commercial licenses are too restrictive and should not be used). Materials under other Free licenses may be included in school and regional libraries.
File formats
Content submitted should be available in file formats that support the OLPC goals. In particular, they must be unencumbered formats (not requiring patent licensing or other restrictions), and they must take relatively little space (so compressed formats are valuable). Document formats like HTML, PDF, DJVU and OpenDocument should be encouraged. In particular, DJVU allows existing paper books to be scanned into an efficient storage format so they can be used as e-books.
See Choosing image formats for more about image formats, such as PNG and SVG. Ogg is valuable for audio.
More about OLPC
For more information about the project, see the overview of OLPC and list of current events on this site. There is also a static website with background information at www.laptop.org.
Examples
School books become mini-websites
Once publishers/authors share their normally printed materials (so that electronic versions can be formed), children will be able to -at the teacher's instruction- turn to page-x simply by clicking on the shortcut icon (or bookmarked web page) of the "eBook" in question and instantly go to page-x; and will be able to associate their assignments directly with a page in the book.
Wikitexts
If you have text material which you want to be made available to anyone for editing, localization, and inclusion in learning packages or lesson plans, you can upload it as a file to this wiki (you must be logged in to do this), create a new project page for it here, or add it directly to Wikibooks in the language of your choice and link to it from this wiki.
Software for learning
If you have software tools, simulations, or packages for learning, you can create a new software project and host it on OLPC servers or on Sourceforge and link to it from this wiki.