Below is the text of a mail I sent to the PMCs last night. Copied here for information:

Over the next few weeks your project may be approached by students participating in a European Commission funded project called OpenSE [1]. These students will be looking for GSoC style mentors in open source projects.

The headline info you need is:

* Mentors will not need to commit as much time as they do to GSoC

* The student/mentor relationship should be largely the same as any other relationship with someone new to your project

* Students will, in general, work on existing issues in your project, but some may come with their own ideas

* All work by the student should be managed and recorded using your projects normal workflow

* Students will not be full time on the project

* Students will not be paid

* Students will have external support from teachers and teaching assistants

The key message for your project community is that this activity should present minimal additional overhead to your normal community support activities.

Having said that, there are a few additional, but small, tasks we ask you to perform during the course of a mentored project:

* acknowledge your agreement to mentor a student

* provide a brief evaluation of the students activities half way through the project cycle (around 6 weeks in most cases)

* provide a brief evaluation of the students activities at the end of the project cycle (around 12 weeks in most cases)

Each of these activities is recorded in a JIRA issue in the ComDev project. This issue will be created by the student during the application process.

It is important to stress that we are not asking mentors to take any responsibility for the success of the students work. All we ask is that you act as a "friendly face" within your community and provide brief evaluations as described above.

Unlike in GSoC these students will (in most cases) be doing this work as part of their formal education. All students will have external tutors and teaching assistants helping them. Therefore, you should only need to help them with their direct contributions to your project (design, code review, applying patches etc.)

Unlike in GSoC students will not be working full time on their projects and thus the overhead on mentors will be considerably less.

The Community Development project is encouraging and supporting this activity in an attempt to evaluate the effectiveness of this approach to helping students understand open source development whilst bringing some valued patches to our projects.

You can find some more information about the mentoring programme (which will evolve in response to experiences and feedback in this experiment) at http://community.apache.org/mentoringprogramme.html

If you have any questions please mail dev@community.apache.org (or if you explicitly want to seek out students for your project).

If you agree to mentor a student all we ask is that you also subscribe to the dev@community.apache.org list (it's low traffic) and touch base with us now and again to let us know how things are going.

Ross
On behalf of the Community Development Project

[1] http://opense.net/

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