The Beta version of the SELF Platform is already available for testers and early adopters. You can check it right now at beta.selfplatform.eu
Contribute to the SELF project. See this list of examples of how you can get involved and/or subscribe to one of the mailing lists.
The Learning Materials Expert Group has examined hundreds of documents on Free Software and Open Standards with the aim of providing the SELF Platform with an initial content of high quality, up-to-date materials. Here you can find a selection of materials that will be atomised and imported in the SELF Platform by the members of the SELF Consortium.
All categories will be defined on this website extremely soon.
Everybody who wants to! Contributing can be done in various ways. Please see our community page for more information.
The educational resources are accessible freely to everyone.
So all users are encouraged to publish materials, as long as they are on-topic (i.e. they are related to Free Software and Open Standards), and meet licensing conditions necessary for cooperative production - essentially, the license permits redistribution and derivative works.
Please see our aTutor QuickGuide and our community section for Learning Materials.
Our endeavours are to provide the materials in as many languages as possible.
You can join an existing Learning Material team or set up a new one in order to translate an exisitng manual into your own language. Please see here.
No. All materials offered through the Platform are freely available.
Yes. While our primary objective is to support our mission for non-commercial purposes, others may benefit from our work, including commercially.
No. The SELF Platform offers materials on all kinds of Free Software applications with no pre-decided preferences. It is entirely up to you to decide which application you like best!
The SELF Platform keeps track of a number of key metrics on each learning object, including the feedback from the evaluation forms associated with them. When you locate a learning object that looks interesting, you will find next to it a quality rating computed by the system. You can also sort your search results on their quality indexes. By default, SELF uses a particular formula to assess the quality of a learning object from its metrics, but it offers alternative formulae, some provided by the platform itself, some by other users like you, or you can roll your own! (WARNING: Some Math Required).
The users themselves do, through their actions. Every time a user puts a learning object in her Bookshelf, she is demonstrating that it has caught enough of her attention to try to keep track of it. Every time a user includes the object into another, he is implicitly stating that it is good enough to use. For more structured metrics that cannot be explicitly inferred from user behavior (for example, clarity of exposition, or technical accuracy), objects have questionnaires attached to them, which can be filled out by any and all users.
Each licence has different conditions and restrictions. As a result, some licences are incompatible with each other. In such cases it is not possible to combine two different materials into something new and build upon it. In order to minimise such issues, SELF follows the policy adopted also by Wikipedia, where all materials are published under a single licence, the GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) with no Invariant Sections and no Front-Cover or Back-Cover texts. This allows maximal recombination of materials within SELF and between SELF and other sources, including Wikipedia. As SELF also includes pre-existing materials from other sources, it also allows other licences to be chosen. If you hold the Copyright in the material you are submitting, please consider accepting the default choice.