2021
CRAFTED: CRAFTED: Enrich and promote traditional and contemporary crafts
CRAFTED: CRAFTED: Enrich and promote traditional and contemporary crafts

September 2021 (26 months)

CRAFTED brings together a diverse consortium composed of experienced Europeana aggregators - European Fashion Heritage Association7, EUscreen8, MUSEU-HUB9, and the Greek national aggregator SearchCulture.gr10, 15 museums and archives from 8 European countries, eight of them involved directly in the consortium, and seven involved through the Greek national aggregator (ten of these institutions are providing content to Europeana for the first time), the Europeana Foundation, and experienced technology partners with the aim to aggregate new high-quality datasets on Europeana, provide novel technologies to enrich collections and carry out public engagement and dissemination activities to promote crafts heritage. The project sets out to achieve six specific objectives:

- Increase the amount of high-quality, multimodal content on Europeana.

- Define and deploy an innovative human-in-the-loop methodology and accompanying toolset for the optimized automatic enrichment of large amounts of CH metadata

- Enhance interest in European crafts and rejuvenation of craft practices.

- Support the takeup of AI and crowdsourcing technologies in the Cultural Heritage sector.

Partners:

1. National Technical University of Athens (NTUA)-established in Greece

2. Michael Culture Association (MCA) - established in Belgium

3. Stichting Nederlands Instituut voor Beeld en Geluid (NISV) - established in Netherlands

4. European Fashion Heritage Association (EFHA) - established in Italy

5. Stichting Europeana (EF) - established in Netherlands

6. AG Culturele Instellingen Antwerpen/Erfgoed (AG CIA) - established in Belgium

7. DATABLE BV (DATABLE) - established in Belgium

8. Université du Luxembourg (UdL) - established in Luxembourg

9. MINISTERE DE LA CULTURE ET DE LA COMMUNICATION - Mobilier national et manufactures nationales des Gobelins, de Beauvais et de la Savonnerie (MCC) - established in France

10. Museum of Arts and Crafts (MUO) - established in Croatia

11. STOWARZYSZENIE MIEDZYNARODOWE CENTRUM ZARZADZANIA INFORMACJA (ICIMSS) - established in Poland

12. Fondazione Museo del Tessuto di Prato (FMTP) - established in Italy

13. Etablissement public Paris Musées (PARIS MUSEES) - established in France

14. NATIONAL DOCUMENTATION CENTER – EKT (ETHNIKO KENTRO TEKMIRIOSIS KAI ILEKTRONIKOU PERIECHOMENOU) (EKT) - established in Greece

Europeana Translate: Europeana Translate: Providing multilingual access to digital cultural heritage
Europeana Translate: Europeana Translate: Providing multilingual access to digital cultural heritage

May 2021 (24 months)

This Action aims to build connections between the Europeana and the Automated Translation Digital Service Infrastructures (DSI) for the benefit of both:

i to improve usability of heritage resources by enriching datasets on Europeana as well as datasets provided by cultural institutions with multilingual metadata; and

ii to significantly enrich the language resources available through the ELRC-SHARE repository by adding millions of records describing cultural heritage items.

The Action will deliver to ELRC-SHARE at least 10 million metadata records to be sourced from the Europeana API, processed and tagged. The resources will include records with data in parallel languages and, where not possible, monolingual records, covering the 24 EU official languages. All provided resources will have a free reuse license (CC0).

Moreover, the Action will train and deploy automated translation engines customised to serve the needs of the Cultural Heritage domain. The engines will be delivered to the European Language Grid (ELG) and will become part of an end-to-end pipeline and a fully-fledged supporting set of tools that connects the two DSIs. The pipeline will be used to source metadata records from Europeana and cultural heritage content providers, to process and translate them to English, evaluate the results, insert the translations as enrichments to cultural heritage metadata records, manage and deliver them to the Europeana platform or to individual Cultural Heritage Institutions’ platforms.

As a result, the provided tools and platforms will be made openly available in order to enable cultural heritage institutions, service providers and other interested parties to reuse the individual tools under different use cases.

The Europeana Translate workflow will be applied to translate at least 25 million Europeana metadata records to be published back to the Europeana Core service platform.

Partners:

1. National Technical University of Athens (NTUA)

2. European Fashion Heritage Association (EFHA) - established in Italy

3. Stichting Nederlands Instituut voor Beeld en Geluid (NISV) - established in Netherlands

4. Pangeanic SL (Pangeanic) - established in Spain

5. Stichting Europeana (EF) - established in Netherlands

6. Michael Culture Association (MCA) - established in Belgium

 

 

OLA: Open Learning for All-enhancing digital Open Educational Resources for inclusion against stereotypes (OLA)
OLA: Open Learning for All-enhancing digital Open Educational Resources for inclusion against stereotypes (OLA)

March 2021 (24 months)

OLA is a 2-year Erasmus+ European project (2021-2023) coordinated by CNR-IRPPS that, following the crisis generated by the COVID-19 pandemics, aims at giving an impetus to “open educational resources” and “open educational practices”, as an opportunity to reduce the digital divide in the European educational context, building a more inclusive society.

Open educational resources – intended as free digital educational resources, collaboratively developed by teacher networks with other social actors – already exist, but are still a fragmented reality, not enough widespread and valued at institutional level. OLA project aims at promoting their development and diffusion by means of: MOOC courses for teachers; creation of guidelines about open educational resources for teachers and editors; participative building of an open access online platform usable by teachers to develop and spread multimedia educational scenarios.

By the end of the project, 80 interdisciplinary scenarios related to STEAM subjects (Science, Technology, Engineering, Art, Mathematics) will be developed, 50 of which will be tested in the 5 partner countries: Cyprus, Greece, Italy, Romania and Spain.

A central issue transversal to the project is paying attention to recognizing stereotypes – starting from, but not limited to gender – and values implicitly conveyed by school textbooks and multimedia online resources, so as to promote a wider concept of “digital competences”, including not only strictly technological competences, but also the capability of using online platforms and information sources critically and responsibly, as a premise for exercising a conscious and informed citizenship.

Partners: 

  • Greece: National Technical University of Athens
                  1° Peiramatiko Gymnasio Athinas of Athens
  • Italy: CNR-IRPPS (international coordinator of the project)
              Istituto Comprensivo Carducci-King of Casoria
  • Cyprus: University of Cyprus
  • Romania: Scoala Gimnaziala Mircea Eliade of Craiova
  • Spain: Centro de Formación Somorrostro of Muskiz
2020
CrowdSchool: Creative Learning at School thanks to a collaborative Crowdsourcing Annotation Process
CrowdSchool: Creative Learning at School thanks to a collaborative Crowdsourcing Annotation Process

September 2020 (36 months)

The CrowdSchool project moves from this situation to underline the importance of human and social capital as articulated in the aims of Erasmus+. The project intends to propose a new model for:

- enhancing schools with new interactive methods for increasing the creative thinking skills of students, taking benefit of the potential present in the digital repositories of cultural institutions.

 - creating an innovative tool for applying STEAM Education (i.e. a combination of Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts and Mathematics) as an access points for guiding student inquiry, dialogue, and critical thinking.

Partners

1. Michael Culture (Belgium)

2. National Technical University of Athens (Greece)

3. Steps (Italy)

4. European Fashion Heritage Association (Italy)

5. Stowarzyszenie Miedzynarodone Centrum (Poland)

6. L. Artistico Liceo F. Arcangeli (Italy)

7. Zespol Szkol Drogowo-Geodezyjnych i Licealnych im. Augusta Witkowskiego w Jaroslawiu (Poland)

8. Ecole Elementaire Polangis (France)

9. Calliope Education (Spain)

CitizenHeritage : Citizen Science Practices in Cultural Heritage: towards a Sustainable Model in Higher education

September 2020 (36 months)

The project encourages citizen science in cultural heritage through the application of crowdsourcing and co-creation tools to some of Europe’s largest open digital collections. It contributes to the notion of European citizenship by enabling stakeholder communities to jointly take responsibility for their heritage advocating an open approach to otherness and a European community spirit surmounting regional and national differences. CitizenHeritage will address researchers in the field of Cultural Heritage, including PhD and Master students from different relevant research fields (Cultural Studies, (Art) History, Memory studies, but also Digital Humanities, Cultural Economics and software engineering) to train them in inducing, governing and leveraging on citizen participation, digital crowdsourcing and co-creation. These methods and activities will teach students how to take sustainable and economic viable decisions when engaging citizens. In order to optimize efficiency, CitizenHeritage will map and critically assess current practices with regards to their educational value and user friendliness. But the project will also develop and test new methods and activities, making use of large European digital collections that help to highlight the relevance and power of cultural diversity.

Partners

1. Katholieke Universiteit Leuven (Belgium)

2. Photoconsortium International Consortium for Photographic Heritage (Italy)

3. National Technical University of Athens (Greece)

4. Web2Learn (Greece)

5. Erasmus Universiteit Rotterdam (Netherlands)

2019
IN.C.L.U.D.E.: Integrated Content and Language via a Unified Digital Environment
IN.C.L.U.D.E.: Integrated Content and Language via a Unified Digital Environment

September 2019 (36 months)

INCLUDE is a 3-year Erasmus+ European project (2019-2022) coordinated by CNR-IRPPS aimed at developing a communal European framework for Content and language integrated learning (CLIL) in secondary school that promotes, besides linguistic and disciplinary competences, also key-competences for lifelong learning suggested by the European Council, with particular reference to the digital, personal and social, citizenship and cultural awareness competences. The concept of “Europeanity”, intended in an inclusive and open way – as a sense of belonging to a European community where linguistic and cultural differences are considered as a resource – is a transversal element that the project aims to value, in order to promote active citizenship and prevent populism, xenophobia and violence.

Among the objectives of the project there is the participative development of an open access, multimedial and interactive online platform usable by teachers to develop and share CLIL scenarios. 120 interdisciplinar scenarios will be developed within the project, 40 of which to be tested in the 5 European partner countries: Cyprus, Greece, Italy, Romania and Spain.

Funded by ERASMUS +

2018
Kaleidoscope: Fifties in Europe Kaleidoscope
Kaleidoscope: Fifties in Europe Kaleidoscope

September 2018 (36 months)

The Action aims at leveraging photographic content from 1950's in Europe, increasing the engagement of citizens with the Europeana content, involving user interaction, crowdsourcing and co-curation of digital content. The Action will implement an intelligent visual similarity search. It will use demonstrator applications web/mobile and augmented reality services in order to improve the end-user experience by supporting discovery and further use of the photographic content in Europeana and combining it with personal experience and own material. It will improve the Europeana database integrating back-end tools to allow users to manipulate photographic collections, then interacting with the source Europeana database to update the existing records with the crowdsourced annotation, contents and addenda. The Action will also develop a community of users for awarenessraising on Europeana content and its potential. Moreover, it will create an educational portal including a Massive Open Online Course (MOOC). Lastly, it will yield data that are beneficial to support curation work.The tools that are created and tested under the overarching theme of 50s in Europe will be developed so as to allow their re-use within other thematic frameworks. In particular the outcomes of this Action will be used to enrich the Europeana Photography and Europeana Migration thematic collections with new stories, new and interesting photographic materials, and other compelling resources for the users’ benefit and engagement.The tools developed will be sustained for at least two years after the end of the Action.

Funded under: Innovation and Networks Executive Agency (INEA)/ Connecting Europe Facility (CEF)/ ICT / A2017

DSI4: The Europeana Digital Service Infrastructure
DSI4: The Europeana Digital Service Infrastructure

September 2018 (48 months)

The aims of DSI4 project are the purchase of services to operate, maintain and further develop Europeana, Europe's digital platform for cultural heritage, as a pan-European cultural heritage platform for citizens, cultural heritage institutions, education, research and creative industries. In particular, the scope of DSI4 is implemented to enhance the active use of the Platform by user groups and to expand the number of Cultural Heritage Institutions providing high-quality content and metadata on the platform and ensuring approval across the EU or the initiative.The Europeana Digital Service Infrastructure (DSI) showcases and provides online access to Europe’s cultural and scientific heritage. Europeana DSI-4 is a continuation of the previous Europeana DSI projects (Europeana DSI, DSI-2, DSI-3). Europeana DSI-4 operates the Europeana core service platform from mid-2018 to mid-2020. The Europeana DSI-4 consortium consists of Europeana Foundation as coordinator as well as 23 partners from ten different countries represented by aggregators and expert hubs, developers, experts and organisations with relevant distribution networks. The consortium that operates the Europeana DSI creates access, interoperability, visibility and use of European cultural heritage in our target markets. The Europeana DSI manages data for use in education, research and creative industries as well as engaging European citizens by providing access to Europeana Collections and Europeana thematic collections. Europeana DSI-4 will fulfil Europeana’s 2020 strategy and Business Plans as confirmed by the European Commission's Expert Group on Digital Cultural Heritage and Europeana (DCHE), European Commission and Europeana Network Association.


Funded under: Connecting Europe Facility (CEF) Trans-European Telecommunications Networks Work Programme 2014.

ANTIKLEIA: Development of technologies and methods for cultural inventory data interoperability
ANTIKLEIA: Development of technologies and methods for cultural inventory data interoperability

July 2018 (36 months)

The project  ANTIKLEIA aims to carry out applied research on semantic interoperability (automatic metadata modeling, use of thesauri terms and ontologies), methods of big data analysis (analysis and extraction of useful data from unstructured data and organs), human-computer interaction methodologies (personalized navigation and search services, data presentation, gaming). In addition, it aims to develop infrastructure services (databases and indexing, APIs) for the retrieval and management of cultural content and metadata, as well as the development of an online platform for navigation, search, presentation and creative reuse of digital content, content sharing and collaboration with other users, as well as launching online crowdfunding campaigns. Part of the project will also be a cultural web space builder that will provide the above services at a personalized level. These services are mainly aimed to provide cultural and tourism services (museums, local government etc.) but also end users. and conducting market research (target customer profile study, competitive analysis and developing a business plan (product promotion strategy, pricing strategy, etc.) for the financial exploitation of project results.


Funded under: Operational Programme Competitiveness, Entrepreneurship and Innovation 2014-2020 (EPAnEK)

Culture Labs: Recipes for social innovation
Culture Labs: Recipes for social innovation

April 2018 (36 months)

The proposal’s central concept is CultureLabs, an open and evolving ICT-empowered infrastructure which comprises a rich variety of resources including guidelines, methodologies, digital tools, existing community engagement projects, as well as novel ideas and approaches that can facilitate social innovation in culture. The infrastructure is addressed to both institutional stakeholders and community members to make use of existing shared, and in many cases commonly created, resources, according to their missions and needs. Different resources, the “ingredients”, can be combined in various ways to form a “recipe” that describes how to carry out a participatory project to address the needs of a specific target audience. The primary focus will be on approaches that build positive awareness about communities’ own heritage and memories, and engage their members as bearers and producers of culture. CultureLabs’ case studies focus on different immigrants communities (e.g. refugees, second generation immigrants, female immigrants etc). CultureLabs toolkits and infrastructure are reusable and extensible, and its ingredients can be easily combined and adjusted to meet the needs of different stakeholders and target groups. At least 20 concrete recipes will be designed through the collaboration between different stakeholders, including museums, civil organisations, and policy makers. Four of these recipes will be implemented and evaluated as pilots in three different countries. Research outcomes and the empirical evidence gained from the project’s activities, including the recipes’ design and implementation, will be consolidated into general-purpose methodological guidelines and best practices that can be adopted by any stakeholder who wishes to organise participatory approaches to CH with a social impact.


Funded under: H2020-EU.3.6.2.2.and H2020-EU.3.6.3.