Click the "Select File" button above, and choose your JCLIC file.
You’ll see a preview, if available.
Click the "Convert file to..." button to extract text information.
Convert JCLIC to another file type
To convert JCLIC projects to another format, you need JClic or other Compressed software.
Convert a file to JCLIC
To convert other file formats to the "Educational Project Archive" file type, you need software like JClic or a similar tool.
About JCLIC files
A .jclic file is an interactive educational project created by JClic, a Java-based authoring tool used by teachers to build puzzles, matching games, and quizzes. The primary disadvantage of this format is its strict dependency on the JClic software ecosystem and the Java Runtime Environment (JRE). It cannot be opened natively by web browsers, standard office suites, or mobile devices, which heavily restricts sharing with students who do not have the software installed.
Converting the file directly into a static document like PDF is impossible because the format relies on dynamic user interaction. However, the best workaround is targeting the ZIP format. A .jclic file is actually a renamed ZIP archive containing an instructional XML document (jclic.xml) and various multimedia assets, such as JPG, PNG, and MP3 files.
Because it is a specialized instructional container, standard online converters fail to process it. Only the original software can properly render the interactive data.
Convert.Guru analyzes your JCLIC file, detects the exact format, and lets you read the text inside.
FAQ
If you want to convert JCLIC file to MP4, AVI, MOV, WMV, FLV, WEBM, MKV, M4V, 3GP, OGV, ASF or RM, you can use JClic or similar software from the "Educational Project Storage" category. In the File menu, look for Save As… or Export….
To convert MTS, MOV, RMVB, DIVX, RM, H264, TS, WMV, VOB, MP4, XVID or AVI files to JCLIC, try JClic or another comparable tool in the "Educational Project Storage" category.
The JCLIC Converter Story
The history of Convert.Guru began over 25 years ago in California with Tom Simondi’s file-format database. A former contributor to Space Shuttle development and a software pioneer of the 1980s, Simondi established a trusted resource for file type analysis that was even referenced by Microsoft Windows XP. Today, we use modern technology to process and convert thousands of file formats while continually improving our JCLIC converter.