Owning the work. You could distribute to each student their own password. 
Before uploading the assignment, they would encrypt using the password you 
provided. This would be effectively like "signing" the document. The 
documents could even share the same open file folder safely. Not as 
sophisticated as GPG, but should work unless students share their passwords 
or have trouble copying/pasting them.

Mark

On Wednesday, May 10, 2017 at 2:46:24 AM UTC-7, Stephen Wilson wrote:
>
> To bring the thread back a little to where it started, I would be 
> interested in developing tiddlywiki for education.
> I would also be interested in looking at ways to export tiddlers easily 
> into a read only format.
> And finally, I would definitely be interested in looking at systems to 
> either generate questions/ mark questions and give feedback automatically.
>
> My use case is for engineering at level 3 (A level/ Pre University 
> stuff).  My tiddlywiki heavily nested eg : 
> http://stephenteacher.tiddlyspot.com/#Statics  I would need a simple way 
> to parse that tree, collect the tiddlers and assemble them in order. 
> On the exercise side I suspect my needs are a little different as ideal I 
> need maths focused solutions.  Essentials would be random question 
> generation eg the question is a+b=? but a and b can be any number from 1 to 
> 10 so each student gets a slightly different question.  Feedback from the 
> student answer would then be good.  The recent if plugin springs to mind as 
> something which could be leveraged to this.    There also needs to be some 
> way for students to own their work.
> I have been curiously looking at http://webwork.maa.org/ and 
> http://www.u-psud.fr/fr/universite/organisation-generale/services/direction-de-l-innovation-pedagogique/utiliser-wims.html
>  
> (Google translate on Chrome to the rescue) for this functionality but have 
> not had the time to install and play with them.  I have also looked at 
> doing similar in tiddlyspot using the matthcell plugin 
> http://stephenteacher.tiddlyspot.com/#Interactive%20Steps%20to%20Solving%20Problems
> So that's where I'm at and what I'd like to do educationally.
>
> Stephen Wilson
>
> stephenteacher.tiddlyspot.com/
>
> On Tuesday, 9 May 2017 21:45:41 UTC+1, Steven Schneider wrote:
>>
>> Got a chance to do a bit more on the epub > html > tiddlywiki workflow.  
>>
>> See http://american-government-imported-text.tiddlyspot.com/ which 
>> imports all tiddlers matching filter from  
>> http://american-government-in-the-information-age.tiddlyspot.com/, which 
>> used text-slicer to parse the html of an epub. I then transclude all 
>> tiddlers using a series of <$list> commands.  Not bad for a quick import of 
>> epub. Work to be done, but proof of concept, at least.
>>
>> //steve.
>>
>>
>>

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